The post-translational modification of histones plays an important role in chromatin regulation, a process that insures the fidelity of gene expression and other DNA transactions. Of the enzymes that mediate post-translation modification, the histone acetyltransferase (HAT) and histone deacetylase (HDAC) proteins that add and remove acetyl groups to and from target lysine residues within histones, respectively, have been the most extensively studied at both the functional and structural levels. Not surprisingly, the aberrant activity of several of these enzymes have been implicated in human diseases such as cancer and metabolic disorders, thus making them important drug targets. Significant mechanistic insights into the function of HATs and HDACs have come from the X-ray crystal structures of these enzymes both alone and in liganded complexes, along with associated enzymatic and biochemical studies. In this review, we will discuss what we have learned from the structures and related biochemistry of HATs and HDACs and the implications of these findings for the design of protein effectors to regulate gene expression and treat disease.
The histidine triad superfamily of nucleotide hydrolases and nucleotide transferases consists of a branch of proteins related to Hint and Aprataxin, a branch of Fhitrelated hydrolases, and a branch of galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (GalT)-related transferases. Although substrates of Fhit and GalT are known and consequences of mutations in Aprataxin, Fhit, and GalT are known, good substrates had not been reported for any member of the Hint branch, and mutational consequences were unknown for Hint orthologs, which are the most ancient and widespread proteins in the Hint branch and in the histidine triad superfamily. Here we show that rabbit and yeast Hint hydrolyze the natural product adenosine-5-monophosphoramidate (AMPNH 2 ) in an active-site-dependent manner at second order rates exceeding 1,000,000 M ؊1 s ؊1 . Yeast strains constructed with specific loss of the Hnt1 active site fail to grow on galactose at elevated temperatures. Loss of Hnt1 enzyme activity also leads to hypersensitivity to mutations in Ccl1, Tfb3, and Kin28, which constitute the TFIIK kinase subcomplex of general transcription factor TFIIH and to mutations in Cak1, which phosphorylates Kin28. The target of Hnt1 regulation in this pathway was shown to be downstream of Cak1 and not to affect stability of Kin28 monomers. Functional complementation of all Hnt1 phenotypes was provided by rabbit Hint, which is only 22% identical to yeast Hnt1 but has very similar adenosine monophosphoramidase activity. Histidine triad (HIT)1 proteins are a superfamily of nucleotide-binding proteins named for a near C-terminal HXHXHXX motif (X is a hydrophobic amino acid) positioned at the ␣-phosphate of nucleotide substrates (1). The first branch of the superfamily is named for rabbit Hint, which had been purified as an abundant protein from cardiac cytosol by adenosine affinity chromatography (2) and shown to have homologs in all forms of life (1). Recently, Aprataxin, a gene located at 9p13 that is inactivated in ataxia with oculomotor apraxia, the second most common of the autosomal recessive ataxias, was identified as a member of the Hint branch of the HIT superfamily (3, 4). Human Fhit (5), which functions as a tumor suppressor protein in human (6 -9) and murine (10, 11) epithelial tissues, is the prototypical member of the second branch of the HIT superfamily. Fhit homologs have been found in fungi (12) and animals (13-16) and exhibit diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase activity. A third branch of the HIT superfamily contains more distantly related nucleotide transferases including galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, which is the enzyme deficient in galactosemics (1), budding yeast diadenosine tetraphosphate phosphorylases ApaI and Apa2 (17), and adenylylsulfate:phosphate adenylyltransferase (18). Ironically, although Hint is the most ancient and widespread of the HIT proteins, reasonable Hint substrates remained unidentified, and the consequences of mutations in Hint or Hint orthologs were unknown (19).Recently, human Hint was identified as...
Nit monomers possess a new alpha-beta-beta-alpha sandwich fold with a presumptive Cys-Glu-Lys catalytic triad. Nit assembles into a tetrameric, 52-stranded beta box that binds Fhit dimers at opposite poles and displays Nit active sites around the middle of the complex. The most carboxy-terminal beta strand of each Nit monomer exits the core of the Nit tetramer and interacts with Fhit. Residence in the NitFhit complex does not alter the nucleotide specificity of Fhit dimers, which are oriented with ApppA-binding surfaces away from Nit.
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