6533b851fe1ef96bd12a9059

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Exploration of the Activation Mechanism of the Epigenetic Regulator MLL3: A QM/MM Study

Sebastián Miranda-rojasFernando MendizabalJohannes KästnerKevin Blanco-esperguezIñaki Tuñón

subject

570StereochemistryLysineTrimerMolecular Dynamics Simulation01 natural sciencesBiochemistryMicrobiologyenzyme catalysisDFTArticleEpigenesis GeneticEnzyme catalysisQM/MM03 medical and health sciencesResidue (chemistry)Deprotonation0103 physical sciencesprotein regulationHumanscancerCàncerMolecular Biology030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesBinding Sites010304 chemical physicsbiologyChemistryLysineNuclear ProteinsMethylation540QR1-502DNA-Binding ProteinsHistonebiology.proteinTyrosinemethyltransferaseProtein MultimerizationProtonsProteïnesTranscription Factors

description

The mixed lineage leukemia 3 or MLL3 is the enzyme in charge of the writing of an epigenetic mark through the methylation of lysine 4 from the N-terminal domain of histone 3 and its deregulation has been related to several cancer lines. An interesting feature of this enzyme comes from its regulation mechanism, which involves its binding to an activating dimer before it can be catalytically functional. Once the trimer is formed, the reaction mechanism proceeds through the deprotonation of the lysine followed by the methyl-transfer reaction. Here we present a detailed exploration of the activation mechanism through a QM/MM approach focusing on both steps of the reaction, aiming to provide new insights into the deprotonation process and the role of the catalytic machinery in the methyl-transfer reaction. Our finding suggests that the source of the activation mechanism comes from conformational restriction mediated by the formation of a network of salt-bridges between MLL3 and one of the activating subunits, which restricts and stabilizes the positioning of several residues relevant for the catalysis. New insights into the deprotonation mechanism of lysine are provided, identifying a valine residue as crucial in the positioning of the water molecule in charge of the process. Finally, a tyrosine residue was found to assist the methyl transfer from SAM to the target lysine.

10.3390/biom11071051https://hdl.handle.net/10550/82432