Cancer-Associated Gain-of-Function Mutations Activate a SWI/SNF-Family Regulatory Hub

癌症相关的功能获得性突变激活SWI/SNF家族调控中心

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作者:Cedric R Clapier ,Naveen Verma ,Timothy J Parnell ,Bradley R Cairns

Abstract

SWI/SNF-family remodelers (BAF/PBAF in mammals) are essential chromatin regulators, and mutations in human BAF/PBAF components are associated with ∼20% of cancers. Cancer-associated missense mutations in human BRG1 (encoding the catalytic ATPase) have been characterized previously as conferring loss-of-function. Here, we show that cancer-associated missense mutations in BRG1, when placed into the orthologous Sth1 ATPase of the yeast RSC remodeler, separate into two categories: loss-of-function enzymes, or instead, gain-of-function enzymes that greatly improve DNA translocation efficiency and nucleosome remodeling in vitro. Our work identifies a structural "hub," formed by the association of several Sth1 domains, that regulates ATPase activity and DNA translocation efficiency. Remarkably, all gain-of-function cancer-associated mutations and all loss-of-function mutations physically localize to distinct adjacent regions in the hub, which specifically regulate and implement DNA translocation, respectively. In vivo, only gain-of-function cancer-associated mutations conferred precocious chromatin accessibility. Taken together, we provide a structure-function mechanistic basis for cancer-associated hyperactivity. Keywords: BAF; BRG1; DNA accessibility; RSC; STH1; SWI/SNF; cancer; chromatin remodeling; nucleosome.

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