It is widely assumed that decreasing transcription factor DNA-binding affinity reduces transcription initiation by diminishing occupancy of sequence-specific regulatory elements. However, in vivo transcription factors find their binding sites while confronted with a large excess of low-affinity degenerate motifs. Here, using the melanoma lineage survival oncogene MITF as a model, we show that low-affinity binding sites act as a competitive reservoir in vivo from which transcription factors are released by mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-stimulated acetylation to promote increased occupancy of their regulatory elements. Consequently, a low-DNA-binding-affinity acetylation-mimetic MITF mutation supports melanocyte development and drives tumorigenesis, whereas a high-affinity non-acetylatable mutant does not. The results reveal a paradoxical acetylation-mediated molecular clutch that tunes transcription factor availability via genome-wide redistribution and couples BRAF to tumorigenesis. Our results further suggest that p300/CREB-binding protein-mediated transcription factor acetylation may represent a common mechanism to control transcription factor availability. © 2020 The Authors Decreasing the DNA-binding affinity of a transcription factor via MAPK-stimulated p300/CBP-mediated acetylation of a lysine contacting the DNA-phosphate backbone paradoxically increases its functional output by promoting release from a genome-wide reservoir of low-affinity binding sites.
Tuning Transcription Factor Availability through Acetylation-Mediated Genomic Redistribution / Louphrasitthiphol, P., Siddaway, R., Loffreda, A., Pogenberg, V., Friedrichsen, H., Schepsky, A., Zeng, Z.q., Lu, M., Strub, T., Freter, R., Lisle, R., Suer, E., Thomas, B., Schuster-Bockler, B., Filippakopoulos, P., Middleton, M., Lu, X., Patton, E.e., Davidson, I., Lambert, J.p., et al.. - In: MOLECULAR CELL. - ISSN 1097-2765. - 79:3(2020), pp. 472-487. [10.1016/j.molcel.2020.05.025]
Tuning Transcription Factor Availability through Acetylation-Mediated Genomic Redistribution
Mazza D
Penultimo
;
2020-01-01
Abstract
It is widely assumed that decreasing transcription factor DNA-binding affinity reduces transcription initiation by diminishing occupancy of sequence-specific regulatory elements. However, in vivo transcription factors find their binding sites while confronted with a large excess of low-affinity degenerate motifs. Here, using the melanoma lineage survival oncogene MITF as a model, we show that low-affinity binding sites act as a competitive reservoir in vivo from which transcription factors are released by mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-stimulated acetylation to promote increased occupancy of their regulatory elements. Consequently, a low-DNA-binding-affinity acetylation-mimetic MITF mutation supports melanocyte development and drives tumorigenesis, whereas a high-affinity non-acetylatable mutant does not. The results reveal a paradoxical acetylation-mediated molecular clutch that tunes transcription factor availability via genome-wide redistribution and couples BRAF to tumorigenesis. Our results further suggest that p300/CREB-binding protein-mediated transcription factor acetylation may represent a common mechanism to control transcription factor availability. © 2020 The Authors Decreasing the DNA-binding affinity of a transcription factor via MAPK-stimulated p300/CBP-mediated acetylation of a lysine contacting the DNA-phosphate backbone paradoxically increases its functional output by promoting release from a genome-wide reservoir of low-affinity binding sites.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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