Tudor, MBT and chromo domains gauge the degree of lysine methylation

Daniel J.; Lake, A; Bedford, MT

Abstract

The post-translational modification of histones regulates many cellular processes, including transcription, replication and DNA repair. A large number of combinations of post-translational modifications are possible. This cipher is referred to as the histone code. Many of the enzymes that lay down this code have been identified. However, so far, few code-reading proteins have been identified. Here, we describe a protein-array approach for identifying methyl-specific interacting proteins. We found that not only chromo domains but also tudor and MBT domains bind to methylated peptides from the amino-terminal tails of histones H3 and H4. Binding specificity observed on the protein-domain microarray was corroborated using peptide pull-downs, surface plasma resonance and far western blotting. Thus, our studies expose tudor and MBT domains as new classes of methyl-lysinebinding protein modules, and also demonstrates that proteindomain microarrays are powerful tools for the identification of new domain types that recognize histone modifications.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000237246100012 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: EMBO REPORTS
Volumen: 7
Número: 4
Editorial: SPRINGERNATURE
Fecha de publicación: 2006
Página de inicio: 397
Página final: 403
DOI:

10.1038/sj.embor.7400625

Notas: ISI