Histone acetyltransferase 1-2 Complex (HAT1/2)

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 33: Line 33:
= Inhibition =
= Inhibition =
-
Although HAT1 was the first histone acetyltransferase enzyme discovered, its function is poorly understood and the first inhibitor of the enzyme was only described in 2019<ref name=”Ngo”> PMID:30637990 </ref>. The HAT1 inhibitor (H4K12CoA) that is a conjugate of the first 20 residues of the H4 protein, covalently linked to CoA through the lysine 12 side chain. H4K12CoA was found to act as a competitive inhibitor to both the H4 peptide substrate as well as acetyl-CoA. Having this inhibitor now allows for more in depth study of therapeutic targets associated with specific disease states. Additionally, H4K12CoA can be used as tool compound to better elucidate the HAT1 specificity and mechanism regarding epigenetic modification of the H4 histone protein. <ref name="Ngo"/>
+
Although HAT1 was the first histone acetyltransferase enzyme discovered, its function is poorly understood and the first inhibitor of the enzyme was only described in 2019<ref name=”Ngo”> PMID:30637990 </ref>. The HAT1 inhibitor (H4K12CoA) that is a conjugate of the first 20 residues of the H4 protein, covalently linked to CoA through the lysine 12 side chain. H4K12CoA was found to act as a competitive inhibitor to both the H4 peptide substrate as well as acetyl-CoA. Having this inhibitor now allows for more in depth study of therapeutic targets associated with specific disease states. Additionally, H4K12CoA can be used as tool compound to better elucidate the HAT1 specificity and mechanism regarding epigenetic modification of the H4 histone protein.
= References =
= References =

Revision as of 15:39, 28 May 2020

The Yeast HAT1-HAT2 Histone Acetyltransferase Complex Bound to a Histone H4 substrate

HAT1-HAT2 Complex pdb: 4PSW

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Student Contributors

Morgan Buckley, Jordan Finch, Caitlin Gaich, Kiran Kaur, Emily Leiderman, Ben Nick

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

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

Personal tools