Abstract

We have determined the human male specific lethal 3 (hMSL3) chromo-barrel domain structure by x-ray crystallography to a resolution of 2.5 Å (r = 0.226, R(free) = 0.270). hMSL3 contains a canonical methyllysine binding pocket made up of residues Tyr-31, Phe-56, Trp-59, and Trp-63. A six-residue insertion between strands β(1) and β(2) of the hMSL3 chromo-barrel domain directs the side chain of Glu-21 into the methyllysine binding pocket where it hydrogen bonds to the NH group of a bound cyclohexylamino ethanesulfonate buffer molecule, likely mimicking interactions with a histone tail dimethyllysine residue. In vitro binding studies revealed that both the human and Drosophila MSL3 chromo-barrel domains bind preferentially to peptides representing the mono or dimethyl isoform of lysine 20 on the histone H4 N-terminal tail (H4K20Me(1) or H4K20Me(2)). Mutation of Tyr-31 to Ala in the hMSL3 methyllysine-binding cage resulted in weaker in vitro binding to H4K20Me(1). The same mutation in the msl3 gene compromised male survival in Drosophila. Combined mutation of Glu-21 and Pro-22 to Ala in hMSL3 resulted in slightly weaker in vitro binding to H4K20Me(1), but the corresponding msl3 mutation had no effect on male survival in Drosophila. We propose MSL3 plays an important role in targeting the male specific lethal complex to chromatin in both humans and flies by binding to H4K20Me(1). Binding studies on the related dMRG15 chromo-barrel domain revealed that MRG15 prefers binding to H4K20Me(3).

Highlights

  • Gene expression [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

  • Similar to the CBD of MRG15 and other tudor and chromo-barrel domains [41, 53,54,55,56,57], a canonical methyllysine binding pocket is evident at one end of the human male specific lethal 3 (hMSL3) ␤-barrel domain, with important residues coming from surface loops between strands ␤1-␤2 and ␤3-␤4 (Figs. 1 and 2)

  • The five hMSL3 CBD molecules observed in the crystal exhibit minimal disorder or heterogeneity at the methyllysine binding pocket and four of the five monomers pack as two almost identically arranged dimers

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Summary

Introduction

Gene expression [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]. MOF, a conserved member of the MYST (Moz, Ysb2, Sas2, Tip60) family of HAT enzymes, functions as the catalytic subunit in a number of distinct HAT complexes that target gene promoters [8], large contiguous domains of chromatin [3, 4, 14, 15], or non-histone proteins such as p53 [5,6,7]. The Drosophila and human MSL3 proteins contain a highly conserved N-terminal chromo-barrel domain (CBD) (residues 2–91; 50% identical) plus a conserved C-terminal MRG domain (residues 196 –512 in dMSL3; 25% identical to hMSL3) [3, 4, 33,34,35].

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