Mechanism of conditional partner selectivity in MITF/TFE family transcription factors with a conserved coiled coil stammer motif

  • Vivian Pogenberg
  • Josué Ballesteros-Álvarez
  • Romana Schober
  • Ingibjörg Sigvaldadóttir
  • Agnieszka Obarska-Kosinska
  • Morlin Milewski
  • Rainer Schindl
  • Margrét Helga Ögmundsdóttir
  • Eiríkur Steingrímsson
  • Matthias Wilmanns

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Interrupted dimeric coiled coil segments are found in a broad range of proteins and generally confer selective functional properties such as binding to specific ligands. However, there is only one documented case of a basic-helix-loop-helix leucine zipper transcription factor-microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF)-in which an insertion of a three-residue stammer serves as a determinant of conditional partner selectivity. To unravel the molecular principles of this selectivity, we have analyzed the high-resolution structures of stammer-containing MITF and an engineered stammer-less MITF variant, which comprises an uninterrupted symmetric coiled coil. Despite this fundamental difference, both MITF structures reveal identical flanking in-phase coiled coil arrangements, gained by helical over-winding and local asymmetry in wild-type MITF across the stammer region. These conserved structural properties allow the maintenance of a proper functional readout in terms of nuclear localization and binding to specific DNA-response motifs regardless of the presence of the stammer. By contrast, MITF heterodimer formation with other bHLH-Zip transcription factors is only permissive when both factors contain either the same type of inserted stammer or no insert. Our data illustrate a unique principle of conditional partner selectivity within the wide arsenal of transcription factors with specific partner-dependent functional readouts.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0305-1048
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 24.01.2020

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

PubMed 31777941