posted on 2015-05-06, 00:00authored byShiho Nakaoka, Kazuki Sasaki, Akihiro Ito, Yoichi Nakao, Minoru Yoshida
Acetylation is a well-characterized
histone modification, which
plays important roles in controlling epigenetic gene expression, and
its malfunction is tightly associated with cancer. By taking advantage
of the specific binding of BRD4 to acetylated lysine residues, we
developed a FRET-based probe for visualizing histone H3 acetylation
in living cells. BRD4, a protein known to be involved in acute myeloid
leukemia and nuclear protein in testis midline carcinoma, recognizes
the acetylation of histone H3 via its bromodomains. The probe exhibited
a significant change in FRET signaling that was dependent on histone
H3 acetylation. Mutagenesis studies revealed that an increase in the
emission ratio reflected the acetylation of either K9 or K14 of histone
H3 within the probe. Since BRD4 has increasingly drawn attention as
a new anticancer drug target, we demonstrated that the developed fluorescent
probe will also serve as a powerful tool to evaluate BRD4 inhibitors
in living cells.