Light‐Activatable MBD‐Readers of 5‐Methylcytosine Reveal Domain‐Dependent Chromatin Association Kinetics In Vivo

Author:

Lin Tzu‐Chen1,Engelhard Lena1,Söldner Benedikt1,Linser Rasmus1,Summerer Daniel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology TU Dortmund University Otto‐Hahn Str. 4a 44227 Dortmund Germany

Abstract

Abstract5‐Methylcytosine (5mC) is the central epigenetic mark of mammalian DNA, and plays fundamental roles in chromatin regulation. 5mC is dynamically read and translated into regulatory outputs by methyl‐CpG‐binding domain (MBD) proteins. These multidomain readers recognize 5mC via an MBD domain, and undergo additional domain‐dependent interactions with multiple additional chromatin components. However, studying this dynamic process is limited by a lack of methods to conditionally control the 5mC affinity of MBD readers in cells. Light‐control of MBD association to chromatin by genetically encoding a photocaged serine at the MBD‐DNA interface is reported. The authors study the association of MBD1 to mouse pericentromeres, dependent on its CxxC3 and transcriptional repressor domains (TRD) which interact with unmethylated CpG and heterochromatin‐associated complexes, respectively. Both domains significantly modulate association kinetics, arguing for a model in which the CxxC3 delays methylation responses of MBD1 by holding it at unmethylated loci, whereas the TRD promotes responses by aiding heterochromatin association is studied. Their approach offers otherwise inaccessible kinetic insights into the domain‐specific regulation of a central MBD reader, and sets the basis for further unravelling how the integration of MBDs into complex heterochromatin interaction networks control the kinetics of 5mC reading and translation into altered chromatin states.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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