Wang YL, et al. (2008) Human ATAC Is a GCN5/PCAF-containing Acetylase Complex with a Novel NC2-like Histone Fold Module That Interacts with the TATA-binding Protein. J Biol Chem 283(49):33808-15
Abstract: Eukaryotic GCN5 acetyltransferases influence diverse biological processes by acetylating histones and non-histone proteins and regulating chromatin and gene-specific transcription as part of multiprotein complexes. In lower eukaryotes and invertebrates these complexes include the yeast ADA complex that is still incompletely understood; the SAGA (Spt-Ada-Gcn5 Acetylase) complexes from yeast to Drosophila that are mostly coactivators; and the ATAC (Ada Two-A Containing) complex, only known in Drosophila and still poorly characterized. In contrast, vertebrate organisms, express two paralogous GCN5-like acetyltransferases (GCN5 and PCAF), which have been found so far only in SAGA-type complexes referred to hereafter as the STAGA (SPT3-TAF9-GCN5/PCAF Acetylase) complexes. We now report the purification and characterization of vertebrate (human) ATAC-type complexes and identify novel components of STAGA. We show that human ATAC complexes incorporate in addition to GCN5 or PCAF (GCN5/PCAF), other epigenetic coregulators (ADA2-A, ADA3, STAF36, and WDR5), cofactors of chromatin assembly/remodeling and DNA replication machineries (POLE3/CHRAC17 and POLE4), the stress- and TGFss-activated protein kinase (TAK1/MAP3K7) and MAP3-kinase regulator (MBIP), additional cofactors of unknown function, and a novel YEATS2-NC2ss histone fold module that interacts with the TATA-binding protein (TBP) and negatively regulates transcription when recruited to a promoter. We further identify the p38 kinase-interacting protein (p38IP/FAM48A) as a novel component of STAGA with distant similarity to yeast Spt20. These results suggest that vertebrate ATAC-type and STAGA-type complexes link specific extracellular signals to modification of chromatin structure and regulation of the basal transcription machinery.
| Status: Published | Type: Journal Article | PubMed ID: 18838386 |
Topics addressed in this paper
Number of different genes curated to this paper: 21
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| Topics | Genes linked to topics (#1 - 10 ) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADA2 | CHD1 | GCN5 | HFI1 | NGG1 | RTG2 | SGF11 | SGF29 | SGF73 | SPT20 | |
| Additional Literature | | | | | | | | | | |
| Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins | | | | | | | | | | |
| Topics | Genes linked to topics (#11 - 20 ) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPT3 | SPT7 | SPT8 | SUS1 | TAF10 | TAF12 | TAF5 | TAF6 | TAF9 | TRA1 | |
| Additional Literature | | | | | | | | | | |
| Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins | | | | | | | | | | |
| Topics | Genes linked to topics (#21 ) |
|---|---|
| UBP8 | |
| Additional Literature | |
| Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins | |




