Nuclear receptor co-repressors are required for the histone-deacetylase activity of HDAC3 in vivo

SH You, HW Lim, Z Sun, M Broache, KJ Won… - Nature structural & …, 2013 - nature.com
SH You, HW Lim, Z Sun, M Broache, KJ Won, MA Lazar
Nature structural & molecular biology, 2013nature.com
Abstract Histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) is an epigenome-modifying enzyme that is
required for normal mouse development and tissue-specific functions. In vitro, HDAC3
protein itself has minimal enzyme activity but gains its histone-deacetylation function from
stable association with the conserved deacetylase-activating domain (DAD) contained in
nuclear receptor co-repressors NCOR1 and SMRT. Here we show that HDAC3 enzyme
activity is undetectable in mice bearing point mutations in the DAD of both NCOR1 and …
Abstract
Histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) is an epigenome-modifying enzyme that is required for normal mouse development and tissue-specific functions. In vitro, HDAC3 protein itself has minimal enzyme activity but gains its histone-deacetylation function from stable association with the conserved deacetylase-activating domain (DAD) contained in nuclear receptor co-repressors NCOR1 and SMRT. Here we show that HDAC3 enzyme activity is undetectable in mice bearing point mutations in the DAD of both NCOR1 and SMRT (NS-DADm), despite having normal levels of HDAC3 protein. Local histone acetylation is increased, and genomic HDAC3 recruitment is reduced though not abrogated. Notably, NS-DADm mice are born and live to adulthood, whereas genetic deletion of HDAC3 is embryonic lethal. These findings demonstrate that nuclear receptor co-repressors are required for HDAC3 enzyme activity in vivo and suggest that a deacetylase-independent function of HDAC3 may be required for life.
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