Histone Lysine Methyltransferase SET7/9

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===Sinefungin===
===Sinefungin===
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[[Image: SinSam.png|300 px| right| thumb|Figure 5: The structure of SAM and Sinefungin. The amine group of sinefungin potentially makes two hydrogen bonds to active site residues in the SET domain.]]Sinefungin is a potent methyltransferase inhibitor that is a natural nucleoside isolated from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streptomyces "Streptomyces"] species.<ref name="Tamura" /> Also referred to as adenosyl-ornithine, it is the delta (5’ adenosyl) derivative of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornithine ornithine] and a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_analog structural analog] of SAM. Sinefugin is unique because it binds in the cofactor pocket rather than where the substrate binds like a typical competitive inhibitor (Figure 5). The amine group of sinefungin potentially makes two hydrogen bonds to the main chain carbonyls of Arg265 and His293. As a result, sinefungin is potentially more stable bound in the active site than SAH due to the formation of these two additional hydrogen bonds, which are not possible with SAH’s sulfur.
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[[Image: SinSam.png|300 px| right| thumb|Figure 5: The structure of SAM and Sinefungin. The amine group of sinefungin potentially makes two hydrogen bonds to active site residues in the SET domain.]]Sinefungin is a potent methyltransferase inhibitor that is a natural nucleoside isolated from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streptomyces "Streptomyces"] species.<ref name="Tamura" /> Also referred to as adenosyl-ornithine, it is the delta (5’ adenosyl) derivative of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornithine ornithine] and a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_analog structural analog] of SAM (Figure 5). Sinefugin is unique because it binds in the cofactor pocket rather than where the substrate binds like a typical competitive inhibitor. The amine group of sinefungin potentially makes two hydrogen bonds to the main chain carbonyls of Arg265 and His293. As a result, sinefungin is potentially more stable bound in the active site than SAH due to the formation of these two additional hydrogen bonds, which are not possible with SAH’s sulfur.

Revision as of 14:10, 22 January 2020

Histone Lysine Methyltransferase, SET7/9: A transcriptional activator

Lysine Methyl Transferase

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Lauryn Padgett, Alexandra Pentala, Madeleine Wilson

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Mark Macbeth, Michal Harel, Valentine J Klimkowski, Angel Herraez

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