Hemi-methylated DNA regulates DNA methylation inheritance through allosteric activation of H3 ubiquitylation by UHRF1

Joseph S. Harrison(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Evan M. Cornett(Van Andel Institute), Dennis Goldfarb(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Paul A. DaRosa(University of Washington), Zimeng M. Li(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Feng Yan(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Bradley M. Dickson(Van Andel Institute), Angela H. Guo(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Daniel V Cantu(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Lilia Kaustov(University of Toronto), Peter J. Brown(University of Toronto), C.H. Arrowsmith(University of Toronto), Dorothy A. Erie(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Michael B. Major(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Rachel E. Klevit(University of Washington), Krzysztof Krajewski(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brian Kuhlman(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brian D. Strahl(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Scott B. Rothbart(Van Andel Institute)
eLife
September 5, 2016
Cited by 147Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The epigenetic inheritance of DNA methylation requires UHRF1, a histone- and DNA-binding RING E3 ubiquitin ligase that recruits DNMT1 to sites of newly replicated DNA through ubiquitylation of histone H3. UHRF1 binds DNA with selectivity towards hemi-methylated CpGs (HeDNA); however, the contribution of HeDNA sensing to UHRF1 function remains elusive. Here, we reveal that the interaction of UHRF1 with HeDNA is required for DNA methylation but is dispensable for chromatin interaction, which is governed by reciprocal positive cooperativity between the UHRF1 histone- and DNA-binding domains. HeDNA recognition activates UHRF1 ubiquitylation towards multiple lysines on the H3 tail adjacent to the UHRF1 histone-binding site. Collectively, our studies are the first demonstrations of a DNA-protein interaction and an epigenetic modification directly regulating E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. They also define an orchestrated epigenetic control mechanism involving modifications both to histones and DNA that facilitate UHRF1 chromatin targeting, H3 ubiquitylation, and DNA methylation inheritance.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis