User:Caitlin Marie Gaich/Sandbox1

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After many structural studies, the catalytic mechanism for HAT1 remains unclear. A structural overlay of HAT1 and Gcn5, a better-understood HAT enzyme, found a conserved glutamate residue in the active site of both molecules. Previous studies found that a mutation at the active site glutamate residue greatly alters the catalytic ability of HAT1, proving it to be structurally important. <ref> DOI:10.1101/gad.240531.114 </ref> The crystallized structure of the HAT1/HAT2 complex supports, with the proximity of potentially catalytic residues, a mechanism for histone acetylation involving the following residues and cofactor: <scene name='81/811713/Mechanism_glu_lys_coa/1'>Glu255, H4Lys14, and Acetyl-CoA</scene>.
After many structural studies, the catalytic mechanism for HAT1 remains unclear. A structural overlay of HAT1 and Gcn5, a better-understood HAT enzyme, found a conserved glutamate residue in the active site of both molecules. Previous studies found that a mutation at the active site glutamate residue greatly alters the catalytic ability of HAT1, proving it to be structurally important. <ref> DOI:10.1101/gad.240531.114 </ref> The crystallized structure of the HAT1/HAT2 complex supports, with the proximity of potentially catalytic residues, a mechanism for histone acetylation involving the following residues and cofactor: <scene name='81/811713/Mechanism_glu_lys_coa/1'>Glu255, H4Lys14, and Acetyl-CoA</scene>.
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[[Image:HAT1_Mechanism.jpg|400px|right|thumb|Figure 3: Proposed HAT1 Mechanism]]
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[[Image:HAT1_Mechanism.jpg|400px|right|thumb|Figure 3: Proposed HAT1 Mechanism. E255 acts as a general base to deprotonate K12 of H4]]
In this mechanism, the glutamate at residue 255 in the active site of the protein acts as a general base by deprotonating lysine 12 of histone 4 (the numbering of the modified lysine residue on histone 4 is shifted two residues in the featured structure).The deprotonated lysine then acts as a nucleophile and attacks the carbonyl carbon of Acetyl CoA (not shown in the structure), forming a tetrahedral transition state containing an oxyanion. The negative charge on the oxyanion is then shift to down to reform the double bond between the oxygen and carbonyl carbon, breaking the scissle bond between the carbonyl carbon and the sulfur atom of acetyl CoA. The resulting product of this reaction is histone 4 with an acetyl-lysine at residue 12 and coenzyme A.
In this mechanism, the glutamate at residue 255 in the active site of the protein acts as a general base by deprotonating lysine 12 of histone 4 (the numbering of the modified lysine residue on histone 4 is shifted two residues in the featured structure).The deprotonated lysine then acts as a nucleophile and attacks the carbonyl carbon of Acetyl CoA (not shown in the structure), forming a tetrahedral transition state containing an oxyanion. The negative charge on the oxyanion is then shift to down to reform the double bond between the oxygen and carbonyl carbon, breaking the scissle bond between the carbonyl carbon and the sulfur atom of acetyl CoA. The resulting product of this reaction is histone 4 with an acetyl-lysine at residue 12 and coenzyme A.

Revision as of 00:19, 26 April 2019

Histone Acetyltransferase HAT1/HAT2 Complex, Saccharomyces cerevisiae

HAT1/HAT2 Complex pdb: 4PSW

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Caitlin Marie Gaich

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