Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alan J. Tackett is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alan J. Tackett.


Nature | 2006

A PHD finger of NURF couples histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation with chromatin remodelling.

Joanna Wysocka; Tomek Swigut; Hua Xiao; Thomas A. Milne; So Yeon Kwon; Landry J; Kauer M; Alan J. Tackett; Brian T. Chait; Paul Badenhorst; Carl Wu; Allis Cd

Lysine methylation of histones is recognized as an important component of an epigenetic indexing system demarcating transcriptionally active and inactive chromatin domains. Trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me3) marks transcription start sites of virtually all active genes. Recently, we reported that the WD40-repeat protein WDR5 is important for global levels of H3K4me3 and control of HOX gene expression. Here we show that a plant homeodomain (PHD) finger of nucleosome remodelling factor (NURF), an ISWI-containing ATP-dependent chromatin-remodelling complex, mediates a direct preferential association with H3K4me3 tails. Depletion of H3K4me3 causes partial release of the NURF subunit, BPTF (bromodomain and PHD finger transcription factor), from chromatin and defective recruitment of the associated ATPase, SNF2L (also known as ISWI and SMARCA1), to the HOXC8 promoter. Loss of BPTF in Xenopus embryos mimics WDR5 loss-of-function phenotypes, and compromises spatial control of Hox gene expression. These results strongly suggest that WDR5 and NURF function in a common biological pathway in vivo, and that NURF-mediated ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling is directly coupled to H3K4 trimethylation to maintain Hox gene expression patterns during development. We also identify a previously unknown function for the PHD finger as a highly specialized methyl-lysine-binding domain.


Cell | 2005

Physical association and coordinate function of the H3 K4 methyltransferase MLL1 and the H4 K16 acetyltransferase MOF

Yali Dou; Thomas A. Milne; Alan J. Tackett; Edwin R. Smith; Aya Fukuda; Joanna Wysocka; C. David Allis; Brian T. Chait; Jay L. Hess; Robert G. Roeder

A stable complex containing MLL1 and MOF has been immunoaffinity purified from a human cell line that stably expresses an epitope-tagged WDR5 subunit. Stable interactions between MLL1 and MOF were confirmed by reciprocal immunoprecipitation, cosedimentation, and cotransfection analyses, and interaction sites were mapped to MLL1 C-terminal and MOF zinc finger domains. The purified complex has a robust MLL1-mediated histone methyltransferase activity that can effect mono-, di-, and trimethylation of H3 K4 and a MOF-mediated histone acetyltransferase activity that is specific for H4 K16. Importantly, both activities are required for optimal transcription activation on a chromatin template in vitro and on an endogenous MLL1 target gene, Hox a9, in vivo. These results indicate an activator-based mechanism for joint MLL1 and MOF recruitment and targeted methylation and acetylation and provide a molecular explanation for the closely correlated distribution of H3 K4 methylation and H4 K16 acetylation on active genes.


Nature | 2016

DNA methylation on N6-adenine in mammalian embryonic stem cells

Tao P. Wu; Tao Wang; Matthew Seetin; Yongquan Lai; Shijia Zhu; Kaixuan Lin; Yifei Liu; Stephanie D. Byrum; Samuel G. Mackintosh; Mei Zhong; Alan J. Tackett; Guilin Wang; Lawrence S. Hon; Gang Fang; James A. Swenberg; Andrew Xiao

It has been widely accepted that 5-methylcytosine is the only form of DNA methylation in mammalian genomes. Here we identify N6-methyladenine as another form of DNA modification in mouse embryonic stem cells. Alkbh1 encodes a demethylase for N6-methyladenine. An increase of N6-methyladenine levels in Alkbh1-deficient cells leads to transcriptional silencing. N6-methyladenine deposition is inversely correlated with the evolutionary age of LINE-1 transposons; its deposition is strongly enriched at young (<1.5 million years old) but not old (>6 million years old) L1 elements. The deposition of N6-methyladenine correlates with epigenetic silencing of such LINE-1 transposons, together with their neighbouring enhancers and genes, thereby resisting the gene activation signals during embryonic stem cell differentiation. As young full-length LINE-1 transposons are strongly enriched on the X chromosome, genes located on the X chromosome are also silenced. Thus, N6-methyladenine developed a new role in epigenetic silencing in mammalian evolution distinct from its role in gene activation in other organisms. Our results demonstrate that N6-methyladenine constitutes a crucial component of the epigenetic regulation repertoire in mammalian genomes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Long-distance combinatorial linkage between methylation and acetylation on histone H3 N termini

Sean D. Taverna; Beatrix Ueberheide; Yifan Liu; Alan J. Tackett; Robert L. Diaz; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Brian T. Chait; Donald F. Hunt; C. David Allis

Individual posttranslational modifications (PTMs) on histones have well established roles in certain biological processes, notably transcriptional programming. Recent genomewide studies describe patterns of covalent modifications, such as H3 methylation and acetylation at promoters of specific target genes, or “bivalent domains,” in stem cells, suggestive of a possible combinatorial interplay between PTMs on the same histone. However, detection of long-range PTM associations is often problematic in antibody-based or traditional mass spectrometric-based analyses. Here, histone H3 from a ciliate model was analyzed as an enriched source of transcriptionally active chromatin. Using a recently developed mass spectrometric approach, combinatorial modification states on single, long N-terminal H3 fragments (residues 1–50) were determined. The entire modification status of intact N termini was obtained and indicated correlations between K4 methylation and H3 acetylation. In addition, K4 and K27 methylation were identified concurrently on one H3 species. This methodology is applicable to other histones and larger polypeptides and will likely be a valuable tool in understanding the roles of combinatorial patterns of PTMs.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Proteomic and genomic characterization of chromatin complexes at a boundary

Alan J. Tackett; David J. Dilworth; Megan J. Davey; Mike O'Donnell; John D. Aitchison; Michael P. Rout; Brian T. Chait

We have dissected specialized assemblies on the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome that help define and preserve the boundaries that separate silent and active chromatin. These assemblies contain characteristic stretches of DNA that flank particular regions of silent chromatin, as well as five distinctively modified histones and a set of protein complexes. The complexes consist of at least 15 chromatin-associated proteins, including DNA pol ɛ, the Isw2-Itc1 and Top2 chromatin remodeling proteins, the Sas3-Spt16 chromatin modifying complex, and Yta7, a bromodomain-containing AAA ATPase. We show that these complexes are important for the faithful maintenance of an established boundary, as disruption of the complexes results in specific, anomalous alterations of the silent and active epigenetic states.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

The mobile nucleoporin Nup2p and chromatin-bound Prp20p function in endogenous NPC-mediated transcriptional control

David J. Dilworth; Alan J. Tackett; Richard S. Rogers; Eugene C. Yi; Rowan H. Christmas; Jennifer J. Smith; Andrew F. Siegel; Brian T. Chait; Richard W. Wozniak; John D. Aitchison

Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) govern macromolecular transport between the nucleus and cytoplasm and serve as key positional markers within the nucleus. Several protein components of yeast NPCs have been implicated in the epigenetic control of gene expression. Among these, Nup2p is unique as it transiently associates with NPCs and, when artificially tethered to DNA, can prevent the spread of transcriptional activation or repression between flanking genes, a function termed boundary activity. To understand this function of Nup2p, we investigated the interactions of Nup2p with other proteins and with DNA using immunopurifications coupled with mass spectrometry and microarray analyses. These data combined with functional assays of boundary activity and epigenetic variegation suggest that Nup2p and the Ran guanylyl-nucleotide exchange factor, Prp20p, interact at specific chromatin regions and enable the NPC to play an active role in chromatin organization by facilitating the transition of chromatin between activity states.


The FASEB Journal | 2012

A maternal high-fat diet modulates fetal SIRT1 histone and protein deacetylase activity in nonhuman primates

Melissa Suter; Aishe Chen; Marie Schluterman Burdine; Mahua Choudhury; R. Alan Harris; Robert H. Lane; Jacob E. Friedman; Kevin L. Grove; Alan J. Tackett; Kjersti Aagaard

In nonhuman primates, we previously demonstrated that a maternal high‐fat diet (MHFD) induces fetal nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and alters the fetal metabolome. These changes are accompanied by altered acetylation of histone H3 (H3K14ac). However, the mechanism behind this alteration in acetylation remains unknown. As SIRT1 is both a lysine deacetylase and a crucial sensor of cellular metabolism, we hypothesized that SIRT1 may be involved in fetal epigenomic alterations. Here we show that in utero exposure to a MHFD, but not maternal obesity per se, increases fetal H3K14ac with concomitant decreased SIRT1 expression and diminished in vitro protein and histone deacetylase activity. MHFD increased H3K14ac and DBC1‐SIRT1 complex formation in fetal livers, both of which were abrogated with diet reversal despite persistent maternal obesity. Moreover, MHFD was associated with altered expression of known downstream effectors deregulated in NAFLD and modulated by SIRT1 (e.g., PPARA, PPARG, SREBF1, CYP7A1, FASN, and SCD). Finally, ex vivo purified SIRT1 retains deacetylase activity on an H3K14ac peptide substrate with preferential activity toward acetylated histone H3; mutagenesis of the catalytic domain of SIRT1 (H363Y) abrogates H3K14ac deacetylation. Our data implicate SIRT1 as a likely molecular mediator of the fetal epigenome and metabolome under MHFD conditions.—Suter, M. A., Chen, A., Burdine, M. S., Choudhury, M., Harris, R. A., Lane, R. H., Friedman, J. E., Grove, K. L., Tackett, A. J., Aagaard, K. M. A maternal high‐fat diet modulates fetal SIRT1 histone and protein deacetylase activity in nonhuman primates. FASEB J. 26, 5106–5114 (2012). www.fasebj.org


Cell Reports | 2012

ChAP-MS: a method for identification of proteins and histone posttranslational modifications at a single genomic locus.

Stephanie D. Byrum; Ana Raman; Sean D. Taverna; Alan J. Tackett

The field of epigenomics has been transformed by chromatin immunoprecipitation approaches that provide for the localization of a defined protein or posttranslationally modified protein to specific chromosomal sites. While these approaches have helped us conceptualize epigenetic mechanisms, the field has been limited by the inability to define features such as the proteome and histone modifications at a specific genomic locus in an unbiased manner. We developed an unbiased approach whereby a unique native genomic locus was isolated, which was followed by high-resolution proteomic identification of specifically associated proteins and histone posttranslational modifications. This chromatin affinity purification with mass spectrometry (ChAP-MS) technique was used to specifically enrich a ~1,000 base pair section of GAL1 chromatin under transcriptionally active and repressive conditions, as well as to identify the specifically bound proteins and histone posttranslational modifications. ChAP-MS should yield insight into the regulatory mechanisms of transcription and help identify factors that epigenetically control chromatin function.


Cell | 2006

Synergistic functions of SII and p300 in productive activator-dependent transcription of chromatin templates.

Mohamed Guermah; Vikas B. Palhan; Alan J. Tackett; Brian T. Chait; Robert G. Roeder

We have reconstituted a highly purified RNA polymerase II transcription system containing chromatin templates assembled with purified histones and assembly factors, the histone acetyltransferase p300, and components of the general transcription machinery that, by themselves, suffice for activated transcription (initiation and elongation) on DNA templates. We show that this system mediates activator-dependent initiation, but not productive elongation, on chromatin templates. We further report the purification of a chromatin transcription-enabling activity (CTEA) that, in a manner dependent upon p300 and acetyl-CoA, strongly potentiates transcription elongation through several contiguous nucleosomes as must occur in vivo. The transcription elongation factor SII is a major component of CTEA and strongly synergizes with p300 (histone acetylation) at a step subsequent to preinitiation complex formation. The purification of CTEA also identified HMGB2 as a coactivator that, while inactive on its own, enhances SII and p300 functions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Pre-steady-state DNA unwinding by bacteriophage T4 Dda helicase reveals a monomeric molecular motor

Bindu Nanduri; Alicia K. Byrd; Robert L. Eoff; Alan J. Tackett; Kevin D. Raney

Helicases are molecular motor enzymes that unwind and translocate nucleic acids. One of the central questions regarding helicase activity is whether the process of coupling ATP hydrolysis to DNA unwinding requires an oligomeric form of the enzyme. We have applied a pre-steady-state kinetics approach to address this question with the bacteriophage T4 Dda helicase. If a helicase can function as a monomer, then the burst amplitude in the pre-steady state might be similar to the concentration of enzyme, whereas if the helicase required oligomerization, then the amplitude would be significantly less than the enzyme concentration. DNA unwinding of an oligonucleotide substrate was conducted by using a Kintek rapid quench-flow instrument. The substrate consisted of 12 bp adjacent to 12 nucleotides of single-stranded DNA. Dda (4 nM) was incubated with substrate (16 nM) in buffer, and the unwinding reaction was initiated by the addition of ATP (5 mM) and Mg2+ (10 mM). The reaction was stopped by the addition of 400 mM EDTA. Product formation exhibited biphasic kinetics, and the data were fit to the equation for a single exponential followed by a steady state. The amplitude of the first phase was 3.5 ± 0.2 nM, consistent with a monomeric helicase. The burst amplitude of product formation was measured over a range of enzyme and substrate concentrations and remained consistent with a functional monomer. Thus, Dda can rapidly unwind oligonucleotide substrates as a monomer, indicating that the functional molecular motor component of a helicase can reside within a single polypeptide.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alan J. Tackett's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephanie D. Byrum

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Samuel G. Mackintosh

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin D. Raney

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathan L. Avaritt

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Deepanwita Sengupta

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sara C. Shalin

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bradley Shields

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge