What is the function of histone methyltransferases?

What is the function of histone methyltransferases?

Histone methyltransferases (HMT) are histone-modifying enzymes (e.g., histone-lysine N-methyltransferases and histone-arginine N-methyltransferases), that catalyze the transfer of one, two, or three methyl groups to lysine and arginine residues of histone proteins.

What does lysine methylation do?

Lysine methylation changes the binding ability of transcription factors to DNA and regulates their transcriptional activities. The regulatory outcome is related to protein substrate, modification site, and cell context.

Which amino acids on Histone H3 can be both methylated and acetylated?

Histones can be methylated on lysine (K) and arginine (R) residues only, but methylation is most commonly observed on lysine residues of histone tails H3 and H4. The tail end furthest from the nucleosome core is the N-terminal (residues are numbered starting at this end).

Can lysine be acetylated and methylated at the same time?

Lysine can undergo various PTMs and thereby contribute to the regulation of different cellular processes. It can be reversibly acetylated and methylated using a pool of respective enzymes, to act as a switch for controlling the binding efficiency of RBPs.

What is the function of hat and HDAC enzymes in chromatin structure?

A HAT catalyzes the transfer of an acetyl group from acetyl CoA to the ɛ-amino group of the lysine residue. With a water molecule, an HDAC promotes the removal of the acetyl group from acetyllysine (Ac-Lys), regenerating the ɛ-amino group and releasing an acetate molecule.

How does histone deacetylation work?

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are enzymes that remove acetyl groups from lysine residues in the NH2 terminal tails of core histones, resulting in a more closed chromatin structure and repression of gene expression. These enzymes are dependent on NAD for their activity and do not contain zinc as do the other HDACs.

author

Back to Top