Article
- The EMBO Journal (1999) 18, 3521 - 3532
- doi:10.1093/emboj/18.13.3521
Crystal structure of the histone acetyltransferase domain of the human PCAF transcriptional regulator bound to coenzyme A
Adrienne Clements1,2, Jeannie R. Rojas1,3, Raymond C. Trievel1,2, Lian Wang1,2, Shelley L. Berger1 and Ronen Marmorstein1,2,3
- The Wistar Institute, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
- Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
- Department of Chemistry and the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
Correspondence to:
Ronen Marmorstein, E-mail: marmor@wistar.upenn.edu
Received 6 April 1999; Accepted 10 May 1999; Revised 10 May 1999
Abstract
The human p300/CBP-associating factor, PCAF, mediates transcriptional activation through its ability to acetylate nucleosomal histone substrates as well as transcriptional activators such as p53. We have determined the 2.3 Å crystal structure of the histone acetyltransferase (HAT) domain of PCAF bound to coenzyme A. The structure reveals a central protein core associated with coenzyme A binding and a pronounced cleft that sits over the protein core and is flanked on opposite sides by the N- and C-terminal protein segments. A correlation of the structure with the extensive mutagenesis data for PCAF and the homologous yeast GCN5 protein implicates the cleft and the N- and C-terminal protein segments as playing an important role in histone substrate binding, and a glutamate residue in the protein core as playing an essential catalytic role. A structural comparison with the coenzyme-bound forms of the related N-acetyltransferases, HAT1 (yeast histone acetyltransferase 1) and SmAAT (Serratia marcescens aminoglycoside 3-N-acetyltransferase), suggests the mode of substrate binding and catalysis by these enzymes and establishes a paradigm for understanding the structure–function relationships of other enzymes that acetylate histones and transcriptional regulators to promote activated transcription.
Keywords:
- acetyltransferase,
- coactivator HAT,
- p300,
- CBP-associating factor



