Login / Signup

An order-to-disorder structural switch activates the FoxM1 transcription factor.

Aimee H MarceauCaileen M BrisonSantrupti NerliHeather E ArsenaultAndrew C McShanEefei ChenHsiau-Wei LeeJennifer A BenantiNikolaos G SgourakisSeth M Rubin
Published in: eLife (2019)
Intrinsically disordered transcription factor transactivation domains (TADs) function through structural plasticity, adopting ordered conformations when bound to transcriptional co-regulators. Many transcription factors contain a negative regulatory domain (NRD) that suppresses recruitment of transcriptional machinery through autoregulation of the TAD. We report the solution structure of an autoinhibited NRD-TAD complex within FoxM1, a critical activator of mitotic gene expression. We observe that while both the FoxM1 NRD and TAD are primarily intrinsically disordered domains, they associate and adopt a structured conformation. We identify how Plk1 and Cdk kinases cooperate to phosphorylate FoxM1, which releases the TAD into a disordered conformation that then associates with the TAZ2 or KIX domains of the transcriptional co-activator CBP. Our results support a mechanism of FoxM1 regulation in which the TAD undergoes switching between disordered and different ordered structures.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • dna binding
  • cell cycle
  • nuclear factor
  • genome wide identification
  • dna methylation
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • signaling pathway
  • high resolution