Structure and methyl-lysine binding selectivity of the HUSH complex subunit MPP8

biorxiv(2024)

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Abstract
The Human Silencing Hub (HUSH) guards the genome from the pathogenic effects of retroelement expression. Composed of MPP8, TASOR, and Periphilin-1, HUSH recognizes actively transcribed retrotransposed sequences by the presence of long (>1.5-kb) nascent transcripts without introns. HUSH recruits effectors that alter chromatin structure, degrade transcripts, and deposit transcriptionally repressive epigenetic marks. Here, we report the crystal structure of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of MPP8 necessary for HUSH activity. The MPP8 CTD consists of five ankyrin repeats followed by a domain with structural homology to the PINIT domains of Siz/PIAS-family SUMO E3 ligases. AlphaFold-Multimer modeling predicts that the MPP8 CTD forms extended interaction interfaces with a SPOC domain and a domain with a novel fold in TASOR. The MPP8 chromodomain, known to bind the repressive mark H3K9me3, binds with similar or higher affinity to sequences in the H3K9 methyltransferase subunits SETDB1, ATF7IP, G9a, and GLP. Hence, MPP8 promotes heterochromatinization by recruiting H3K9 methyltransferases. Our work identifies novel structural elements in MPP8 required for HUSH complex assembly and silencing, thereby fulfilling vital functions in controlling retrotransposons. ### Competing Interest Statement Y.M. is a consultant for Related Sciences LLC and has profits interests in Danger Bio LLC. None of the other authors have any conflicts of interest.
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