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== Mechanism ==
== Mechanism ==
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Several mechanisms for the transfer of the acetyl group to the Lys-12 of the histone have been proposed. One possible mechanism consists of a 2-step process. The acetyl group is first transferred to a holding intermediate on the enzyme before subsequently being transferred to Lys-12. There are two cysteine residues, <scene name='81/811098/Cys-107/1'>Cys-107</scene> and <scene name='81/811098/Cys-234/1'>Cys-234</scene>, that could serve as sites to accept and acetyl group but are not in close enough proximity to the active site (22615379). Another proposed mechanism that has been conserved across several HAT1 studies consists of deprotonating the -amino group on the Lys-12 of H4. This mechanism was proposed by Wu et al with respect to the human HAT1 protein. Analysis was done on the 1BOB model (retrieved from the protein database) and similar residues with respect to location and function were identified. Residues Glu-162, Glu-255, and Asp-256 cooperate to form a <scene name='81/811098/Catalytic_triad/2'>catalytic triad</scene> that establishes a basic environment that deprotonates the Lys-12 reside of H4(22615379). Of those residues current research is uncertain which (if any) accept the proton of Lys-12. Deprotonation of the amino group on the Lys-12 makes the residue nucleophilic enough to directly attack the carbonyl carbon to initiate the acetyl transfer(22615379). The transfer mechanism is contingent on the conformational change and the formation of a functional gate that spans the concave groove over the bound Acetyl CoA and holds it in place while the catalytic deprotonation process takes place.
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Several mechanisms for the transfer of the acetyl group to the Lys-12 of the histone have been proposed. One possible mechanism consists of a 2-step process. The acetyl group is first transferred to a holding intermediate on the enzyme before subsequently being transferred to Lys-12. There are two cysteine residues, <scene name='81/811098/Cys-107/1'>Cys-107</scene> and <scene name='81/811098/Cys-234/1'>Cys-234</scene>, that could serve as sites to accept and acetyl group but are not in close enough proximity to the active site (22615379). Another proposed mechanism that has been conserved across several HAT1 studies consists of deprotonating the -amino group on the Lys-12 of H4. This mechanism was proposed by Wu et al with respect to the human HAT1 protein. Analysis was done on the 1BOB model (retrieved from the protein database) and similar residues with respect to location and function were identified. Residues <scene name='81/811098/Glu-162/1'>Glu-162</scene>, Glu-255, and Asp-256 cooperate to form a <scene name='81/811098/Catalytic_triad/2'>catalytic triad</scene> that establishes a basic environment that deprotonates the Lys-12 reside of H4(22615379). Of those residues current research is uncertain which (if any) accept the proton of Lys-12. Deprotonation of the amino group on the Lys-12 makes the residue nucleophilic enough to directly attack the carbonyl carbon to initiate the acetyl transfer(22615379). The transfer mechanism is contingent on the conformational change and the formation of a functional gate that spans the concave groove over the bound Acetyl CoA and holds it in place while the catalytic deprotonation process takes place.

Revision as of 21:08, 7 April 2019

Histone Acetyltransferase HAT1

HAT1

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References

  1. Agudelo Garcia PA, Hoover ME, Zhang P, Nagarajan P, Freitas MA, Parthun MR. Identification of multiple roles for histone acetyltransferase 1 in replication-coupled chromatin assembly. Nucleic Acids Res. 2017 Sep 19;45(16):9319-9335. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkx545. PMID:28666361 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkx545

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Emily Leiderman

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