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Recurrent SMARCB1 Mutations Reveal a Nucleosome Acidic Patch Interaction Site That Potentiates mSWI/SNF Complex Chromatin Remodeling

Authors :
Roodolph St. Pierre
Lee Barrett
Clifford J. Woolf
Tom W. Muir
Hai T. Dao
Alfredo M. Valencia
Olubusayo Bolonduro
Zoe C. Yeoh
Clayton K. Collings
Crystal Hermawan
Cigall Kadoch
Yung-Chih Cheng
Zhen-Yu Sun
Mary K. Dornon
Nicholas E. Vangos
Dawn E. Comstock
Hyuk-Soo Seo
Sirano Dhe-Paganon
Nazar Mashtalir
Junwei Huang
Source :
Cell
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Summary Mammalian switch/sucrose non-fermentable (mSWI/SNF) complexes are multi-component machines that remodel chromatin architecture. Dissection of the subunit- and domain-specific contributions to complex activities is needed to advance mechanistic understanding. Here, we examine the molecular, structural, and genome-wide regulatory consequences of recurrent, single-residue mutations in the putative coiled-coil C-terminal domain (CTD) of the SMARCB1 (BAF47) subunit, which cause the intellectual disability disorder Coffin-Siris syndrome (CSS), and are recurrently found in cancers. We find that the SMARCB1 CTD contains a basic α helix that binds directly to the nucleosome acidic patch and that all CSS-associated mutations disrupt this binding. Furthermore, these mutations abrogate mSWI/SNF-mediated nucleosome remodeling activity and enhancer DNA accessibility without changes in genome-wide complex localization. Finally, heterozygous CSS-associated SMARCB1 mutations result in dominant gene regulatory and morphologic changes during iPSC-neuronal differentiation. These studies unmask an evolutionarily conserved structural role for the SMARCB1 CTD that is perturbed in human disease.

Details

ISSN :
10974172
Volume :
179
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78e62d2ea085e0e4c21a072c2e7881d8