The bromodomain mediates transcriptional intermediary factor 1α-nucleosome interactions

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Abstract

Nuclear histone acetyltransferases, DNA-dependent ATPases, and transcriptional intermediary factors (TIFs) all harbor a distinct structural module known as the bromodomain (BrD). Although the BrD can interact with histones H3 and H4 and their acetylated N-terminal tails in vitro, its function in a chromosomal environment remains elusive. We used the nuclear receptor coregulator TIF1α, a protein kinase that associates tightly with euchromatin, to analyze the properties of the BrD in a nucleosomal environment in vitro. Here, we report that TIF1α-chromatin association is direct and involves DNA and nucleosome interactions mediated by the BrD. Mutation of the BrD signature peptide, PMDL, abolishes DNA binding and disrupts BrD-nucleosome interactions. Based on our results, we propose that the BrD plays a critical role in vivo by directing transregulators to their cognate location on nucleosomal DNA.

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Remboutsika, E., Yamamoto, K., Harbers, M., & Schmutz, M. (2002). The bromodomain mediates transcriptional intermediary factor 1α-nucleosome interactions. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(52), 50318–50325. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M203759200

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