Litcius/Paper detail

The TFIIS N-terminal domain (TND): a transcription assembly module at the interface of order and disorder

Kateřina Čermáková, Václav Veverka, H. Courtney Hodges

2023Biochemical Society Transactions17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Interaction scaffolds that selectively recognize disordered protein strongly shape protein interactomes. An important scaffold of this type that contributes to transcription is the TFIIS N-terminal domain (TND). The TND is a five-helical bundle that has no known enzymatic activity, but instead selectively reads intrinsically disordered sequences of other proteins. Here, we review the structural and functional properties of TNDs and their cognate disordered ligands known as TND-interacting motifs (TIMs). TNDs or TIMs are found in prominent members of the transcription machinery, including TFIIS, super elongation complex, SWI/SNF, Mediator, IWS1, SPT6, PP1-PNUTS phosphatase, elongin, H3K36me3 readers, the transcription factor MYC, and others. We also review how the TND interactome contributes to the regulation of transcription. Because the TND is the most significantly enriched fold among transcription elongation regulators, TND- and TIM-driven interactions have widespread roles in the regulation of many transcriptional processes.

Topics & Concepts

InteractomeTranscription factorBiologyElongation factorProtein–protein interactionTranscription (linguistics)Cell biologyScaffold proteinComputational biologyPlasma protein bindingGeneticsProtein domainGeneSignal transductionRNAPhilosophyRibosomeLinguisticsGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsCellular transport and secretionUbiquitin and proteasome pathways