Abstract

KRAB domain Zinc finger proteins are one of the most abundant families of transcriptional regulators in higher vertebrates. The prevailing view is that KRAB domain proteins function as potent transcriptional repressors by recruiting TRIM28 and promoting heterochromatin spreading. However, the extent to which all KRAB domain proteins are TRIM28-dependent transcriptional repressors is currently unclear. Our studies on mouse ZFP568 revealed that TRIM28 recruitment by KRAB domain proteins is not sufficient to warrant transcriptional repressive activity. By using luciferase reporter assays and yeast two-hybrid experiments, we tested the ability of ZFP568 and other mouse KRAB domain proteins to repress transcription and bind TRIM28. We found that some mouse KRAB domain proteins are poor transcriptional repressors despite their ability to recruit TRIM28, while others showed strong KRAB-dependent transcriptional repression, but no TRIM28 binding. Together, our results show that the transcriptional repressive activity of KRAB-ZNF proteins does not correlate with their ability to recruit TRIM28, and provide evidence that KRAB domains can regulate transcription in a TRIM28-independent fashion. Our findings challenge the current understanding of the molecular mechanisms used by KRAB domain proteins to control gene expression and highlight that a high percentage of KRAB domain proteins in the mouse genome differ from the consensus KRAB sequence at amino acid residues that are critical for TRIM28 binding and/or repressive activity.

Highlights

  • Krüppel-associated box (KRAB) domain proteins are one of the most abundant protein families in higher vertebrates, with as many as 381 human and 357 mouse protein coding genes [1]

  • Our studies provide insight about the molecular mechanisms of KRAB-mediated transcriptional repression by revealing that the repressive activity of the KRAB domain proteins does not correlate with their ability to recruit TRIM28

  • Using a luciferase reporter system and yeast two-hybrid assays, we found that mutations in the first KRAB motif of ZFP568 disrupt its repressive activity, but not its ability to recruit TRIM28, suggesting that TRIM28 recruitment is not sufficient for KRAB-domain mediated repression

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Summary

Introduction

Krüppel-associated box (KRAB) domain proteins are one of the most abundant protein families in higher vertebrates, with as many as 381 human and 357 mouse protein coding genes [1]. A remarkable feature of this protein family is that, with the exception of the MEISTZ protein in sea urchin, the KRAB motif is restricted to tetrapod organisms [2,3,4,5]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0163555 September 22, 2016

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