A nucleosome is a basic unit of chromatin. It consists of ~150 base-pairs of DNA wrapped around a histone octamer.
Histone octamers are composed of two copies of each of individual histones H3, H4, H2A, and H2B. In addition to the genetic-level regulation mediated by transcriptional factors, enhancers, etc., epigenetic regulators modulate developmental-stage specific, cell-type specific gene expressions via reversible chemical modifications on DNA and/or nucleosomes. This often leads to change in the chromatin architecture, known as euchromatin and heterochromatin, thereby systematically regulating gene expression without genetic alteration.
My laboratory recently determined the cryo-EM structure of the human Mixed-lineage Leukemia 1 (MLL1) core complex bound to the nucleosome (Park et. al., 2019, Nat. Comm.). MLL1 is a histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferase, and H3K4 methylation appears highly enriched at transcriptional regulatory regions, including promoters and distal regulatory enhancers. Aberrant expression of the core components (e.g., ASH2L, WDR5) of MLL complexes has been reported in a vast majority of human tumors of different origins and contributes to disease progression and prognosis. Our cryo-EM structure could address the molecular mechanism of how the MLL1 core complex uniquely recognizes the nucleosome and methylates its substrate, histone H3 tails.
We aim to continue our efforts to elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which epigenetic regulators modulate its substrate–nucleosome by visualizing them using cryo-EM approach.