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Histone methyltransferase SUV39H1 participates in host defense by methylating mycobacterial histone-like protein HupB.

The EMBO journal (2017-11-25)
Imtiyaz Yaseen, Mitali Choudhury, Manjula Sritharan, Sanjeev Khosla
ABSTRAKT

Host cell defense against an invading pathogen depends upon various multifactorial mechanisms, several of which remain undiscovered. Here, we report a novel defense mechanism against mycobacterial infection that utilizes the histone methyltransferase, SUV39H1. Normally, a part of the host chromatin, SUV39H1, was also found to be associated with the mycobacterial bacilli during infection. Its binding to bacilli was accompanied by trimethylation of the mycobacterial histone-like protein, HupB, which in turn reduced the cell adhesion capability of the bacilli. Importantly, SUV39H1-mediated methylation of HupB reduced the mycobacterial survival inside the host cell. This was also true in mice infection experiments. In addition, the ability of mycobacteria to form biofilms, a survival strategy of the bacteria dependent upon cell-cell adhesion, was dramatically reduced in the presence of SUV39H1. Thus, this novel defense mechanism against mycobacteria represents a surrogate function of the epigenetic modulator, SUV39H1, and operates by interfering with their cell-cell adhesion ability.

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Anti-Maltose Binding Protein Antibody, serum, Chemicon®