Abstract

BackgroundAcetylation of lysine residues in histone tails plays an important role in the regulation of gene transcription. Bromdomains are the readers of acetylated histone marks, and, consequently, bromodomain-containing proteins have a variety of chromatin-related functions. Moreover, they are increasingly being recognised as important mediators of a wide range of diseases. The first potent and selective bromodomain inhibitors are beginning to be described, but the diverse or unknown functions of bromodomain-containing proteins present challenges to systematically demonstrating cellular efficacy and selectivity for these inhibitors. Here we assess the viability of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) assays as a target agnostic method for the direct visualisation of an on-target effect of bromodomain inhibitors in living cells.ResultsMutation of a conserved asparagine crucial for binding to acetylated lysines in the bromodomains of BRD3, BRD4 and TRIM24 all resulted in reduction of FRAP recovery times, indicating loss of or significantly reduced binding to acetylated chromatin, as did the addition of known inhibitors. Significant differences between wild type and bromodomain mutants for ATAD2, BAZ2A, BRD1, BRD7, GCN5L2, SMARCA2 and ZMYND11 required the addition of the histone deacetylase inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) to amplify the binding contribution of the bromodomain. Under these conditions, known inhibitors decreased FRAP recovery times back to mutant control levels. Mutation of the bromodomain did not alter FRAP recovery times for full-length CREBBP, even in the presence of SAHA, indicating that other domains are primarily responsible for anchoring CREBBP to chromatin. However, FRAP assays with multimerised CREBBP bromodomains resulted in a good assay to assess the efficacy of bromodomain inhibitors to this target. The bromodomain and extraterminal protein inhibitor PFI-1 was inactive against other bromodomain targets, demonstrating the specificity of the method.ConclusionsViable FRAP assays were established for 11 representative bromodomain-containing proteins that broadly cover the bromodomain phylogenetic tree. Addition of SAHA can overcome weak binding to chromatin, and the use of tandem bromodomain constructs can eliminate masking effects of other chromatin binding domains. Together, these results demonstrate that FRAP assays offer a potentially pan-bromodomain method for generating cell-based assays, allowing the testing of compounds with respect to cell permeability, on-target efficacy and selectivity.

Highlights

  • Acetylation of lysine residues in histone tails plays an important role in the regulation of gene transcription

  • Sixty-one unique bromodomains have been identified in forty-two diverse human proteins, which function as transcriptional regulators, chromatin remodelling factors, splicing factors, scaffold proteins and signal transducers, or have additional epigenetic functions such as methyltransferase or Histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity [1]

  • These known functions provide possible downstream biological readouts for BRD4 bromodomain inhibition, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) assays allow the disruption of chromatin binding to be directly visualised in living cells

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Summary

Introduction

Acetylation of lysine residues in histone tails plays an important role in the regulation of gene transcription. Bromdomains are the readers of acetylated histone marks, and, bromodomaincontaining proteins have a variety of chromatin-related functions. They are increasingly being recognised as important mediators of a wide range of diseases. Bromodomain-containing proteins have been implicated in a wide range of diseases. The involvement of bromodomain-containing proteins in such a wide range of diseases makes them attractive therapeutic targets, and, as a result, a number of bromodomain inhibitors have been entered into clinical trials [9,10,11,12,13]

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