4.6 Review

Structural aspects of HDAC8 mechanism and dysfunction in Cornelia de Lange syndrome spectrum disorders

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 1965-1976

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.3030

Keywords

birth defect; human genetics; protein crystallography; zinc enzyme; lysine deacetylase

Funding

  1. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
  2. NIH [GM49758, T32 GM008275]

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Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) encompasses a broad spectrum of phenotypes characterized by distinctive craniofacial abnormalities, limb malformations, growth retardation, and intellectual disability. CdLS spectrum disorders are referred to as cohesinopathies, with similar to 70% of patients having a mutation in a gene encoding a core cohesin protein (SMC1A, SMC3, or RAD21) or a cohesin regulatory protein (NIPBL or HDAC8). Notably, the regulatory function of HDAC8 in cohesin biology has only recently been discovered. This Zn2+-dependent hydrolase catalyzes the deacetylation of SMC3, a necessary step for cohesin recycling during the cell cycle. To date, 23 different missense mutants in the gene encoding HDAC8 have been identified in children with developmental features that overlap those of CdLS. Enzymological, biophysical, and structural studies of CdLS HDAC8 protein mutants have yielded critical insight on compromised catalysis in vitro. Most CdLS HDAC8 mutations trigger structural changes that directly or indirectly impact substrate binding and catalysis. Additionally, several mutations significantly compromise protein thermostability. Intriguingly, catalytic activity in many HDAC8 mutants can be partially or fully restored by an N-acylthiourea activator, suggesting a plausible strategy for the chemical rescue of compromised HDAC8 catalysis in vivo.

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