Danica Butler
University of Oxford
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Featured researches published by Danica Butler.
Nature | 2007
Stanley S. Ng; K.L. Kavanagh; Michael A. McDonough; Danica Butler; E.S. Pilka; Benoı̂t M. R. Liénard; James E. Bray; P. Savitsky; O. Gileadi; F von Delft; Nathan R. Rose; John Offer; J C Scheinost; Tomasz Borowski; M. Sundstrom; Christopher J. Schofield; U. Oppermann
Post-translational histone modification has a fundamental role in chromatin biology and is proposed to constitute a ‘histone code’ in epigenetic regulation. Differential methylation of histone H3 and H4 lysyl residues regulates processes including heterochromatin formation, X-chromosome inactivation, genome imprinting, DNA repair and transcriptional regulation. The discovery of lysyl demethylases using flavin (amine oxidases) or Fe(ii) and 2-oxoglutarate as cofactors (2OG oxygenases) has changed the view of methylation as a stable epigenetic marker. However, little is known about how the demethylases are selective for particular lysyl-containing sequences in specific methylation states, a key to understanding their functions. Here we reveal how human JMJD2A (jumonji domain containing 2A), which is selective towards tri- and dimethylated histone H3 lysyl residues 9 and 36 (H3K9me3/me2 and H3K36me3/me2), discriminates between methylation states and achieves sequence selectivity for H3K9. We report structures of JMJD2A–Ni(ii)–Zn(ii) inhibitor complexes bound to tri-, di- and monomethyl forms of H3K9 and the trimethyl form of H3K36. The structures reveal a lysyl-binding pocket in which substrates are bound in distinct bent conformations involving the Zn-binding site. We propose a mechanism for achieving methylation state selectivity involving the orientation of the substrate methyl groups towards a ferryl intermediate. The results suggest distinct recognition mechanisms in different demethylase subfamilies and provide a starting point to develop chemical tools for drug discovery and to study and dissect the complexity of reversible histone methylation and its role in chromatin biology.
Science | 2009
Celia J. Webby; Alexander Wolf; Natalia Gromak; Mathias Dreger; Holger B. Kramer; Benedikt M. Kessler; Michael L. Nielsen; Corinna Schmitz; Danica Butler; John R. Yates; Claire Delahunty; Phillip Hahn; Andreas Lengeling; Matthias Mann; Nick J. Proudfoot; Christopher J. Schofield; Angelika Böttger
Modifying the Modifier Covalent modification of proteins provides an important means whereby their function is regulated. Hydroxylation, catalyzed by oxygenase enzymes, plays an important role in the response to hypoxia, for example. The human protein Jmjd6 has been thought to act as an oxygenase, catalyzing the demethylation of histone H3 at arginine-2 and histone H4 at arginine-3. Webby et al. (p. 90) now show that Jmjd6 interacts with the messenger RNA splicing factor U2AF65 and acts to hydroxylate this protein at lysine residues, modifications also seen in vivo. Furthermore, Jmjd6 modulates the alternative splicing of both an endogenous gene and an introduced mini-gene. An oxygenase with an important role in vertebrate development hydroxylates a messenger RNA splicing factor. The finding that the metazoan hypoxic response is regulated by oxygen-dependent posttranslational hydroxylations, which regulate the activity and lifetime of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF), has raised the question of whether other hydroxylases are involved in the regulation of gene expression. We reveal that the splicing factor U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein auxiliary factor 65-kilodalton subunit (U2AF65) undergoes posttranslational lysyl-5-hydroxylation catalyzed by the Fe(II) and 2-oxoglutarate–dependent dioxygenase Jumonji domain-6 protein (Jmjd6). Jmjd6 is a nuclear protein that has an important role in vertebrate development and is a human homolog of the HIF asparaginyl-hydroxylase. Jmjd6 is shown to change alternative RNA splicing of some, but not all, of the endogenous and reporter genes, supporting a specific role for Jmjd6 in the regulation of RNA splicing.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Kirsty S. Hewitson; Benoît M. R. Liénard; Michael A. McDonough; Ian J. Clifton; Danica Butler; Alexie S. Soares; Neil J. Oldham; Luke A. McNeill; Christopher J. Schofield
In humans both the levels and activity of the α-subunit of the hypoxia-inducible transcription factor (HIF-α) are regulated by its post-translation hydroxylation as catalyzed by iron- and 2-oxoglutarate (2OG)-dependent prolyl and asparaginyl hydroxylases (PHD1-3 and factor-inhibiting HIF (FIH), respectively). One consequence of hypoxia is the accumulation of tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates (TCAIs). In vitro assays were used to assess non-2OG TCAIs as inhibitors of purified PHD2 and FIH. Under the assay conditions, no significant FIH inhibition was observed by the TCAIs or pyruvate, but fumarate, succinate, and isocitrate inhibited PHD2. Mass spectrometric analyses under nondenaturing conditions were used to investigate the binding of TCAIs to PHD2 and supported the solution studies. X-ray crystal structures of FIH in complex with Fe(II) and fumarate or succinate revealed similar binding modes for each in the 2OG co-substrate binding site. The in vitro results suggest that the cellular inhibition of PHD2, but probably not FIH, by fumarate and succinate may play a role in the Warburg effect providing that appropriate relative concentrations of the components are achieved under physiological conditions.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Michael A. McDonough; K.L. Kavanagh; Danica Butler; Timothy Searls; U. Oppermann; Christopher J. Schofield
Refsum disease (RD), a neurological syndrome characterized by adult onset retinitis pigmentosa, anosmia, sensory neuropathy, and phytanic acidaemia, is caused by elevated levels of phytanic acid. Many cases of RD are associated with mutations in phytanoyl-CoA 2-hydroxylase (PAHX), an Fe(II) and 2-oxoglutarate (2OG)-dependent oxygenase that catalyzes the initial α-oxidation step in the degradation of phytenic acid in peroxisomes. We describe the x-ray crystallographic structure of PAHX to 2.5 Å resolution complexed with Fe(II) and 2OG and predict the molecular consequences of mutations causing RD. Like other 2OG oxygenases, PAHX possesses a double-stranded β-helix core, which supports three iron binding ligands (His175, Asp177, and His264); the 2-oxoacid group of 2OG binds to the Fe(II) in a bidentate manner. The manner in which PAHX binds to Fe(II) and 2OG together with the presence of a cysteine residue (Cys191) 6.7 Å from the Fe(II) and two further histidine residues (His155 and His281) at its active site distinguishes it from that of the other human 2OG oxygenase for which structures are available, factor inhibiting hypoxia-inducible factor. Of the 15 PAHX residues observed to be mutated in RD patients, 11 cluster in two distinct groups around the Fe(II) (Pro173, His175, Gln176, Asp177, and His220) and 2OG binding sites (Trp193, Glu197, Ile199, Gly204, Asn269, and Arg275). PAHX may be the first of a new subfamily of coenzyme A-binding 2OG oxygenases.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Phillip Hahn; Ivonne Wegener; Alison Burrells; Jens Böse; Alexander Wolf; Christian Erck; Danica Butler; Christopher J. Schofield; Angelika Böttger; Andreas Lengeling
Background Methylation of residues in histone tails is part of a network that regulates gene expression. JmjC domain containing proteins catalyze the oxidative removal of methyl groups on histone lysine residues. Here, we report studies to test the involvement of Jumonji domain-containing protein 6 (Jmjd6) in histone lysine demethylation. Jmjd6 has recently been shown to hydroxylate RNA splicing factors and is known to be essential for the differentiation of multiple tissues and cells during embryogenesis. However, there have been conflicting reports as to whether Jmjd6 is a histone-modifying enzyme. Methodology/Principal Findings Immunolocalization studies reveal that Jmjd6 is distributed throughout the nucleoplasm outside of regions containing heterochromatic DNA, with occasional localization in nucleoli. During mitosis, Jmjd6 is excluded from the nucleus and reappears in the telophase of the cell cycle. Western blot analyses confirmed that Jmjd6 forms homo-multimers of different molecular weights in the nucleus and cytoplasm. A comparison of mono-, di-, and tri-methylation states of H3K4, H3K9, H3K27, H3K36, and H4K20 histone residues in wildtype and Jmjd6-knockout cells indicate that Jmjd6 is not involved in the demethylation of these histone lysine residues. This is further supported by overexpression of enzymatically active and inactive forms of Jmjd6 and subsequent analysis of histone methylation patterns by immunocytochemistry and western blot analysis. Finally, treatment of cells with RNase A and DNase I indicate that Jmjd6 may preferentially associate with RNA/RNA complexes and less likely with chromatin. Conclusions/Significance Taken together, our results provide further evidence that Jmjd6 is unlikely to be involved in histone lysine demethylation. We confirmed that Jmjd6 forms multimers and showed that nuclear localization of the protein involves association with a nucleic acid matrix.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Monica Mantri; T. Krojer; Eleanor A. L. Bagg; Celia J. Webby; Danica Butler; Grazyna Kochan; K.L. Kavanagh; U. Oppermann; Michael A. McDonough; Christopher J. Schofield
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2009
Daniel J. Darley; Danica Butler; Samuel J. Prideaux; Thomas W. Thornton; Abigail D. Wilson; Timothy J. Woodman; Michael D. Threadgill; Matthew D. Lloyd
Journal of Lipid Research | 2005
Timothy Searls; Danica Butler; Winnie Chien; Mridul Mukherji; Matthew D. Lloyd; Christopher J. Schofield
Proceedings of The Physiological Society | 2007
Daniel J. Darley; Danica Butler; Michael D. Threadgill; Matthew D. Lloyd
Archive | 2007
Z. Zhang; Danica Butler; Michael A. McDonough; K.L. Kavanagh; James E. Bray; Stanley S. Ng; F. von Delft; C.H. Arrowsmith; J. Weigelt; A. Edwards; M. Sundstrom; Christopher J. Schofield; U. Oppermann