Chemical Synthesis
of Post-Translationally Modified
H2AX Reveals Redundancy in Interplay between Histone Phosphorylation,
Ubiquitination, and Methylation on the Binding of 53BP1 with Nucleosomes
posted on 2022-09-27, 19:33authored byHuasong Ai, Guo-Chao Chu, Qingyue Gong, Ze-Bin Tong, Zhiheng Deng, Xin Liu, Fan Yang, Ziyu Xu, Jia-Bin Li, Changlin Tian, Lei Liu
The
chemical synthesis of homogeneously modified histones
is a
powerful approach to quantitatively decipher how post-translational
modifications (PTMs) modulate epigenetic events. Herein, we describe
the expedient syntheses of a selection of phosphorylated and ubiquitinated
H2AX proteins in a strategy integrating expressed protein hydrazinolysis
and auxiliary-mediated protein ligation. These modified H2AX proteins
were then used to discover that although H2AXS139 phosphorylation
can enhance the binding of the DNA damage repair factor 53BP1 to either
an unmodified nucleosome or that bearing a single H2AXK15ub or H4K20me2
modification, it augments 53BP1’s binding only weakly to nucleosomes
bearing both H2AXK15ub and H4K20me2. To better understand why such
a trivalent additive effect is lacking, we solved the cryo-EM structure
(3.38 Å) of the complex of 53BP1 with the H2AXK15ub/S139ph_H4K20me2
nucleosome, which showed that H2AXS139 phosphorylation distorts the
interaction interface between ubiquitin and 53BP1’s UDR motif.
Our study revealed that there is redundancy in the interplay of multiple
histone PTMs, which may be useful for controlling the dynamic distribution
of effector proteins onto nucleosomes bearing different histone variants
and PTMs in a time-dependent fashion, through specific cellular biochemical
events.