Litcius/Paper detail

Reversible acetylation of HDAC8 regulates cell cycle

Cheng-Wei Sang, Xuedong Li, Jingxuan Liu, Ziyin Chen, Minhui Xia, Miao Yu, Wei Yu

2024EMBO Reports12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

HDAC8, a member of class I HDACs, plays a pivotal role in cell cycle regulation by deacetylating the cohesin subunit SMC3. While cyclins and CDKs are well-established cell cycle regulators, our knowledge of other regulators remains limited. Here we reveal the acetylation of K202 in HDAC8 as a key cell cycle regulator responsive to stress. K202 acetylation in HDAC8, primarily catalyzed by Tip60, restricts HDAC8 activity, leading to increased SMC3 acetylation and cell cycle arrest. Furthermore, cells expressing the mutant form of HDAC8 mimicking K202 acetylation display significant alterations in gene expression, potentially linked to changes in 3D genome structure, including enhanced chromatid loop interactions. K202 acetylation impairs cell cycle progression by disrupting the expression of cell cycle-related genes and sister chromatid cohesion, resulting in G2/M phase arrest. These findings indicate the reversible acetylation of HDAC8 as a cell cycle regulator, expanding our understanding of stress-responsive cell cycle dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

HDAC8AcetylationCell cycleCohesinBiologyCell biologyCell Cycle ProteinCell cycle checkpointRegulatorEstablishment of sister chromatid cohesionGeneticsCellGeneChromatinHistone H2AHistone Deacetylase Inhibitors ResearchProtein Degradation and InhibitorsEpigenetics and DNA Methylation