Litcius/Paper detail

Structural basis for interaction between CLAMP and MSL2 proteins involved in the specific recruitment of the dosage compensation complex in <i>Drosophila</i>

Е. А. Тихонова, Sofia S. Mariasina, Sergey V. Efimov, Vladimir I. Polshakov, Oksana Maksimenko, Pavel Georgiev, Artem Bonchuk

2022Nucleic Acids Research17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transcriptional regulators select their targets from a large pool of similar genomic sites. The binding of the Drosophila dosage compensation complex (DCC) exclusively to the male X chromosome provides insight into binding site selectivity rules. Previous studies showed that the male-specific organizer of the complex, MSL2, and ubiquitous DNA-binding protein CLAMP directly interact and play an important role in the specificity of X chromosome binding. Here, we studied the highly specific interaction between the intrinsically disordered region of MSL2 and the N-terminal zinc-finger C2H2-type (C2H2) domain of CLAMP. We obtained the NMR structure of the CLAMP N-terminal C2H2 zinc finger, which has a classic C2H2 zinc-finger fold with a rather unusual distribution of residues typically used in DNA recognition. Substitutions of residues in this C2H2 domain had the same effect on the viability of males and females, suggesting that it plays a general role in CLAMP activity. The N-terminal C2H2 domain of CLAMP is highly conserved in insects. However, the MSL2 region involved in the interaction is conserved only within the Drosophila genus, suggesting that this interaction emerged during the evolution of a mechanism for the specific recruitment of the DCC on the male X chromosome in Drosophilidae.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyDosage compensationDrosophila (subgenus)DrosophilidaeGeneticsCompensation (psychology)ClampDrosophila melanogasterComputational biologyCell biologyEvolutionary biologyGeneGene expressionMechanical engineeringEngineeringClampingPsychologyPsychoanalysisInsect Resistance and GeneticsViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in InsectsNeurobiology and Insect Physiology Research