Crucial Roles for Interactions between MLL3/4 and INI1 in Nuclear Receptor Transactivation

Author:

Lee Seunghee1,Kim Dae-Hwan1,Goo Young Hwa1,Lee Young Chul2,Lee Soo-Kyung1345,Lee Jae W.3

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Molecular and Cellular Biology (S.L., D.-H.K., Y.H.G., S.-K.L.), Houston, Texas 77030

2. Hormone Research Center (Y.C.L.), School of Biological Sciences and Technology, Chonnam National University, Gwangju 500-757, Korea

3. Molecular and Human Genetics (S.-K.L., J.W.L.), Houston, Texas 77030

4. Neuroscience (S.-K.L.), Houston, Texas 77030

5. Program in Developmental Biology (S.-K.L.), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030

Abstract

AbstractNuclear receptor (NR) transactivation involves multiple coactivators, and the molecular basis for how these are functionally integrated needs to be determined to fully understand the NR action. Activating signal cointegrator-2 (ASC-2), a transcriptional coactivator of many NRs and transcription factors, forms a steady-state complex, ASCOM (for ASC-2 complex), which contains histone H3-lysine-4 (H3K4) methyltransferase MLL3 or its paralog MLL4. Here, we show that ASCOM requires a functional cross talk with the ATPase-dependent chromatin remodeling complex Swi/Snf for efficient NR transactivation. Our results reveal that ASCOM and Swi/Snf are tightly colocalized in the nucleus and that ASCOM and Swi/Snf promote each other’s binding to NR target genes. We further show that the C-terminal SET domain of MLL3 and MLL4 directly interacts with INI1, an integral subunit of Swi/Snf. Our mutational analysis demonstrates that this interaction underlies the mutual facilitation of ASCOM and Swi/Snf recruitment to NR target genes. Importantly, this study uncovers a specific protein-protein interaction as a novel venue to couple two distinct enzymatic coactivator complexes during NR transactivation.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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