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Directed mutational scanning reveals a balance between acidic and hydrophobic residues in strong human activation domains.

Authors :
Staller, Max V
Staller, Max V
Ramirez, Eddie
Kotha, Sanjana R
Holehouse, Alex S
Pappu, Rohit V
Cohen, Barak A
Staller, Max V
Staller, Max V
Ramirez, Eddie
Kotha, Sanjana R
Holehouse, Alex S
Pappu, Rohit V
Cohen, Barak A
Source :
Cell systems; vol 13, iss 4, 334-345.e5; 2405-4712
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Acidic activation domains are intrinsically disordered regions of the transcription factors that bind coactivators. The intrinsic disorder and low evolutionary conservation of activation domains have made it difficult to identify the sequence features that control activity. To address this problem, we designed thousands of variants in seven acidic activation domains and measured their activities with a high-throughput assay in human cell culture. We found that strong activation domain activity requires a balance between the number of acidic residues and aromatic and leucine residues. These findings motivated a predictor of acidic activation domains that scans the human proteome for clusters of aromatic and leucine residues embedded in regions of high acidity. This predictor identifies known activation domains and accurately predicts previously unidentified ones. Our results support a flexible acidic exposure model of activation domains in which the acidic residues solubilize hydrophobic motifs so that they can interact with coactivators. A record of this paper's transparent peer review process is included in the supplemental information.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Cell systems; vol 13, iss 4, 334-345.e5; 2405-4712
Notes :
application/pdf, Cell systems vol 13, iss 4, 334-345.e5 2405-4712
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391586867
Document Type :
Electronic Resource