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Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers

The BTB domain is an oligomerization domain found in over 300 proteins encoded in the human genome. In the family of BTB domain and zinc finger–containing (ZBTB) transcription factors, 49 members share the same protein architecture. The N-terminal BTB domain is structurally conserved among the famil...

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Autores principales: Piepoli, Sofia, Barakat, Sarah, Nogay, Liyne, Şimşek, Büşra, Akkose, Umit, Taskiran, Hakan, Tolay, Nazife, Gezen, Melike, Yeşilada, Canberk Yarkın, Tuncay, Mustafa, Adebali, Ogün, Atilgan, Canan, Erman, Batu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Life Science Alliance LLC 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9468604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36096675
http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201474
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author Piepoli, Sofia
Barakat, Sarah
Nogay, Liyne
Şimşek, Büşra
Akkose, Umit
Taskiran, Hakan
Tolay, Nazife
Gezen, Melike
Yeşilada, Canberk Yarkın
Tuncay, Mustafa
Adebali, Ogün
Atilgan, Canan
Erman, Batu
author_facet Piepoli, Sofia
Barakat, Sarah
Nogay, Liyne
Şimşek, Büşra
Akkose, Umit
Taskiran, Hakan
Tolay, Nazife
Gezen, Melike
Yeşilada, Canberk Yarkın
Tuncay, Mustafa
Adebali, Ogün
Atilgan, Canan
Erman, Batu
author_sort Piepoli, Sofia
collection PubMed
description The BTB domain is an oligomerization domain found in over 300 proteins encoded in the human genome. In the family of BTB domain and zinc finger–containing (ZBTB) transcription factors, 49 members share the same protein architecture. The N-terminal BTB domain is structurally conserved among the family members and serves as the dimerization site, whereas the C-terminal zinc finger motifs mediate DNA binding. The available BTB domain structures from this family reveal a natural inclination for homodimerization. In this study, we investigated the potential for heterodimer formation in the cellular environment. We selected five BTB homodimers and four heterodimer structures. We performed cell-based binding assays with fluorescent protein–BTB domain fusions to assess dimer formation. We tested the binding of several BTB pairs, and we were able to confirm the heterodimeric physical interaction between the BTB domains of PATZ1 and PATZ2, previously reported only in an interactome mapping experiment. We also found this pair to be co-expressed in several immune system cell types. Finally, we used the available structures of BTB domain dimers and newly constructed models in extended molecular dynamics simulations (500 ns) to understand the energetic determinants of homo- and heterodimer formation. We conclude that heterodimer formation, although frequently described as less preferred than homodimers, is a possible mechanism to increase the combinatorial specificity of this transcription factor family.
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spelling pubmed-94686042022-09-14 Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers Piepoli, Sofia Barakat, Sarah Nogay, Liyne Şimşek, Büşra Akkose, Umit Taskiran, Hakan Tolay, Nazife Gezen, Melike Yeşilada, Canberk Yarkın Tuncay, Mustafa Adebali, Ogün Atilgan, Canan Erman, Batu Life Sci Alliance Research Articles The BTB domain is an oligomerization domain found in over 300 proteins encoded in the human genome. In the family of BTB domain and zinc finger–containing (ZBTB) transcription factors, 49 members share the same protein architecture. The N-terminal BTB domain is structurally conserved among the family members and serves as the dimerization site, whereas the C-terminal zinc finger motifs mediate DNA binding. The available BTB domain structures from this family reveal a natural inclination for homodimerization. In this study, we investigated the potential for heterodimer formation in the cellular environment. We selected five BTB homodimers and four heterodimer structures. We performed cell-based binding assays with fluorescent protein–BTB domain fusions to assess dimer formation. We tested the binding of several BTB pairs, and we were able to confirm the heterodimeric physical interaction between the BTB domains of PATZ1 and PATZ2, previously reported only in an interactome mapping experiment. We also found this pair to be co-expressed in several immune system cell types. Finally, we used the available structures of BTB domain dimers and newly constructed models in extended molecular dynamics simulations (500 ns) to understand the energetic determinants of homo- and heterodimer formation. We conclude that heterodimer formation, although frequently described as less preferred than homodimers, is a possible mechanism to increase the combinatorial specificity of this transcription factor family. Life Science Alliance LLC 2022-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9468604/ /pubmed/36096675 http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201474 Text en © 2022 Piepoli et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International, as described at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Articles
Piepoli, Sofia
Barakat, Sarah
Nogay, Liyne
Şimşek, Büşra
Akkose, Umit
Taskiran, Hakan
Tolay, Nazife
Gezen, Melike
Yeşilada, Canberk Yarkın
Tuncay, Mustafa
Adebali, Ogün
Atilgan, Canan
Erman, Batu
Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title_full Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title_fullStr Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title_full_unstemmed Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title_short Sibling rivalry among the ZBTB transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
title_sort sibling rivalry among the zbtb transcription factor family: homodimers versus heterodimers
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9468604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36096675
http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201474
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