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A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules

Our genome is assembled into and array of highly dynamic nucleosome structures allowing spatial and temporal access to DNA. The nucleosomes are subject to a wide array of post-translational modifications, altering the DNA-histone interaction and serving as docking sites for proteins exhibiting effec...

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Autores principales: Darvekar, Sagar, Rekdal, Cecilie, Johansen, Terje, Sjøttem, Eva
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3799622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24205348
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078907
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author Darvekar, Sagar
Rekdal, Cecilie
Johansen, Terje
Sjøttem, Eva
author_facet Darvekar, Sagar
Rekdal, Cecilie
Johansen, Terje
Sjøttem, Eva
author_sort Darvekar, Sagar
collection PubMed
description Our genome is assembled into and array of highly dynamic nucleosome structures allowing spatial and temporal access to DNA. The nucleosomes are subject to a wide array of post-translational modifications, altering the DNA-histone interaction and serving as docking sites for proteins exhibiting effector or “reader” modules. The nuclear proteins SPBP and RAI1 are composed of several putative “reader” modules which may have ability to recognise a set of histone modification marks. Here we have performed a phylogenetic study of their putative reader modules, the C-terminal ePHD/ADD like domain, a novel nucleosome binding region and an AT-hook motif. Interactions studies in vitro and in yeast cells suggested that despite the extraordinary long loop region in their ePHD/ADD-like chromatin binding domains, the C-terminal region of both proteins seem to adopt a cross-braced topology of zinc finger interactions similar to other structurally determined ePHD/ADD structures. Both their ePHD/ADD-like domain and their novel nucleosome binding domain are highly conserved in vertebrate evolution, and construction of a phylogenetic tree displayed two well supported clusters representing SPBP and RAI1, respectively. Their genome and domain organisation suggest that SPBP and RAI1 have occurred from a gene duplication event. The phylogenetic tree suggests that this duplication has happened early in vertebrate evolution, since only one gene was identified in insects and lancelet. Finally, experimental data confirm that the conserved novel nucleosome binding region of RAI1 has the ability to bind the nucleosome core and histones. However, an adjacent conserved AT-hook motif as identified in SPBP is not present in RAI1, and deletion of the novel nucleosome binding region of RAI1 did not significantly affect its nuclear localisation.
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spelling pubmed-37996222013-11-07 A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules Darvekar, Sagar Rekdal, Cecilie Johansen, Terje Sjøttem, Eva PLoS One Research Article Our genome is assembled into and array of highly dynamic nucleosome structures allowing spatial and temporal access to DNA. The nucleosomes are subject to a wide array of post-translational modifications, altering the DNA-histone interaction and serving as docking sites for proteins exhibiting effector or “reader” modules. The nuclear proteins SPBP and RAI1 are composed of several putative “reader” modules which may have ability to recognise a set of histone modification marks. Here we have performed a phylogenetic study of their putative reader modules, the C-terminal ePHD/ADD like domain, a novel nucleosome binding region and an AT-hook motif. Interactions studies in vitro and in yeast cells suggested that despite the extraordinary long loop region in their ePHD/ADD-like chromatin binding domains, the C-terminal region of both proteins seem to adopt a cross-braced topology of zinc finger interactions similar to other structurally determined ePHD/ADD structures. Both their ePHD/ADD-like domain and their novel nucleosome binding domain are highly conserved in vertebrate evolution, and construction of a phylogenetic tree displayed two well supported clusters representing SPBP and RAI1, respectively. Their genome and domain organisation suggest that SPBP and RAI1 have occurred from a gene duplication event. The phylogenetic tree suggests that this duplication has happened early in vertebrate evolution, since only one gene was identified in insects and lancelet. Finally, experimental data confirm that the conserved novel nucleosome binding region of RAI1 has the ability to bind the nucleosome core and histones. However, an adjacent conserved AT-hook motif as identified in SPBP is not present in RAI1, and deletion of the novel nucleosome binding region of RAI1 did not significantly affect its nuclear localisation. Public Library of Science 2013-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3799622/ /pubmed/24205348 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078907 Text en © 2013 Darvekar et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Darvekar, Sagar
Rekdal, Cecilie
Johansen, Terje
Sjøttem, Eva
A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title_full A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title_fullStr A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title_full_unstemmed A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title_short A Phylogenetic Study of SPBP and RAI1: Evolutionary Conservation of Chromatin Binding Modules
title_sort phylogenetic study of spbp and rai1: evolutionary conservation of chromatin binding modules
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3799622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24205348
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078907
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