posted on 2019-07-12, 14:49authored byT Zhang, G Wei, CJ Millard, R Fischer, R Konietzny, BM Kessler, JWR Schwabe, N Brockdorff
Transcriptional regulation by chromatin is a highly dynamic process directed through the recruitment and coordinated action of epigenetic modifiers and readers of these modifications. Using an unbiased proteomic approach to find interactors of H3K36me3, a modification enriched on active chromatin, here we identify PWWP2A and HDAC2 among the top interactors. PWWP2A and its paralog PWWP2B form a stable complex with NuRD subunits MTA1/2/3:HDAC1/2:RBBP4/7, but not with MBD2/3, p66α/β, and CHD3/4. PWWP2A competes with MBD3 for binding to MTA1, thus defining a new variant NuRD complex that is mutually exclusive with the MBD2/3 containing NuRD. In mESCs, PWWP2A/B is most enriched at highly transcribed genes. Loss of PWWP2A/B leads to increases in histone acetylation predominantly at highly expressed genes, accompanied by decreases in Pol II elongation. Collectively, these findings suggest a role for PWWP2A/B in regulating transcription through the fine-tuning of histone acetylation dynamics at actively transcribed genes.
Funding
T.Z. is supported by graduate scholarships from the Oxford Clarendon Fund, University College, and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). Work in the Brockdorff lab is funded by grants from the Wellcome Trust (103768) and the European Research Council (340081). J.W.R.S. is supported by a Senior Investigator Award (WT100237) from the Wellcome Trust. J.W.R.S. is a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award Holder. The Kessler lab was funded by grants from the Kennedy Trust, John Fell Fund 133/075, the Wellcome Trust (097813/Z/11/Z) and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/N034295/1).
History
Citation
Nature Communications, 2018, 9 (1), p. 3798
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/Biological Sciences/Molecular & Cell Biology
All the high-throughput data (ChIP-seq, 4sU-RNA-seq) generated in this study have been deposited in GEO under GSE112114. Mass spectrometry data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD010445.