4.7 Article

Modulation of the Chromatin Phosphoproteome by the Haspin Protein Kinase

Journal

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages 1724-1740

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M113.034819

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EMBO long-term fellowship
  2. European Research Council (ERC) advanced proteomics grant v3.0' [233266]
  3. Phos-phoNetX program from SystemsX.ch
  4. SNF project grant
  5. Swiss Cancer League
  6. Novartis Foundation
  7. SGC [1097737]
  8. AbbVie
  9. Boehringer Ingelheim
  10. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  11. Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  12. Genome Canada
  13. Glaxo-SmithKline
  14. Janssen
  15. Lilly Canada
  16. Novartis Research Foundation
  17. Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation
  18. Pfizer
  19. Takeda
  20. Wellcome Trust [092809/Z/10/Z]
  21. European Union FP7 Grant [278568 PRIMES]
  22. Lundbeck Foundation
  23. Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP)
  24. Danish Council for Independent Research (FSS)
  25. European Research Council (ERC)

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Recent discoveries have highlighted the importance of Haspin kinase activity for the correct positioning of the kinase Aurora B at the centromere. Haspin phosphorylates Thr(3) of the histone H3 (H3), which provides a signal for Aurora B to localize to the centromere of mitotic chromosomes. To date, histone H3 is the only confirmed Haspin substrate. We used a combination of biochemical, pharmacological, and mass spectrometric approaches to study the consequences of Haspin inhibition in mitotic cells. We quantified 3964 phosphorylation sites on chromatin-associated proteins and identified a Haspin protein-protein interaction network. We determined the Haspin consensus motif and the co-crystal structure of the kinase with the histone H3 tail. The structure revealed a unique bent substrate binding mode positioning the histone H3 residues Arg(2) and Lys(4) adjacent to the Haspin phosphorylated threonine into acidic binding pockets. This unique conformation of the kinase-substrate complex explains the reported modulation of Haspin activity by methylation of Lys(4) of the histone H3. In addition, the identification of the structural basis of substrate recognition and the amino acid sequence preferences of Haspin aided the identification of novel candidate Haspin substrates. In particular, we validated the phosphorylation of Ser(137) of the histone variant macroH2A as a target of Haspin kinase activity. MacroH2A Ser(137) resides in a basic stretch of about 40 amino acids that is required to stabilize extranucleosomal DNA, suggesting that phosphorylation of Ser(137) might regulate the interactions of macroH2A and DNA. Overall, our data suggest that Haspin activity affects the phosphorylation state of proteins involved in gene expression regulation and splicing.

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