Abstract

The plant homeodomain (PHD) zinc finger is one of 14 known zinc-binding domains. PHD domains have been found in more than 400 eukaryotic proteins and are characterized by a Cys(4)-His-Cys(3) zinc-binding motif that spans 50-80 residues. The precise function of PHD domains is currently unknown; however, the PHD domains of the ING1 and ING2 tumor suppressors have been shown recently to bind phosphoinositides (PIs). We have recently identified a novel PHD-containing protein, Pf1, as a binding partner for the abundant and ubiquitous transcriptional corepressor mSin3A. Pf1 contains two PHD zinc fingers, PHD1 and PHD2, and functions to bridge mSin3A to the TLE1 corepressor. Here, we show that PHD1, but not PHD2, binds several monophosporylated PIs but most strongly to PI(3)P. Surprisingly, a polybasic region that follows the PHD1 is necessary for PI(3)P binding. Furthermore, this polybasic region binds specifically to PI(3)P when fused to maltose-binding protein, PHD2, or as an isolated peptide, demonstrating that it is sufficient for specific PI binding. By exchanging the polybasic regions between different PHD fingers we show that this region is a strong determinant of PI binding specificity. These findings establish the Pf1 polybasic region as a phosphoinositide-binding module and suggest that the PHD domains function down-stream of phosphoinositide signaling triggered by the interaction between polybasic regions and phosphoinositides.

Highlights

  • Little is known about the function of nuclear PIs; recent reports suggest a role in chromatin-dependent changes in gene expression

  • Mutation of six basic residues in the polybasic region that follows the plant homeodomain (PHD) domain of ING2 eliminated ING2 binding to PI[5]P [8]. Together these data suggest that the polybasic region that follows some PHD domains contributes to specific PI binding

  • To determine the lipid binding properties of PHD1(C) and PHD2(C), both were expressed as maltose-binding protein (MBP) fusion proteins and tested for binding to a variety of immobilized lipids in an overlay format (Fig. 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Little is known about the function of nuclear PIs; recent reports suggest a role in chromatin-dependent changes in gene expression. PHD zinc fingers from other proteins interact with PIs [8], demonstrating that this function is not restricted to PHD domains present in the ING family. Our data suggest that the PHD zinc finger and the polybasic region have separable functions that cooperate to regulate gene expression in response to extracellular signals.

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