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Structure and function of histone acetyltransferases

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 58, Issue 5-6, Pages 693-703

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/PL00000893

Keywords

histone acetyltransferases (HATs); chromatin regulation; histone modifications; GNAT (GcnS-related acetyltranferases) superfamily; gene regulation

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Histone acetyltranferase (HAT) enzymes are the catalytic subunit of large multisubunit HAT complexes that acetylate the E-amino group of specific lysine residues on histone tails to promote transcriptional activation. Recent structural and functional studies on the divergent HAT enzymes Gcn5/PCAF, Esa1 and Hat1 have provided new insights into the underlying mechanism of histone binding and acetylation by HAT proteins. The three HAT enzymes contain a structurally conserved core domain that plays a functionally conserved role in binding the coenzyme A cofactor and in harboring the putative general base for catalysis. Structurally variable N- and C-terminal domains appear to contain a related scaffold that mediates histone substrate binding. These data provide a framework for understanding the structure and function of other more divergent HAT proteins such as TAF(II)250 and CBP/p300, and provides a starting point for understanding how HAT proteins may cooperate with other factors within in vivo HAT complexes to promote transcriptional activation.

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