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Dive into the research topics where Minkui Luo is active.

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Featured researches published by Minkui Luo.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Current Chemical Biology Approaches to Interrogate Protein Methyltransferases

Minkui Luo

Protein methyltransferases (PMTs) play various physiological and pathological roles through methylating histone and nonhistone targets. However, most PMTs including more than 60 human PMTs remain to be fully characterized. The current approaches to elucidate the functions of PMTs have been diversified by many emerging chemical biology technologies. This review focuses on progress in these aspects and is organized into four discussion modules (assays, substrates, cofactors, and inhibitors) that are important to elucidate biological functions of PMTs. These modules are expected to provide general guidance and present emerging methods for researchers to select and combine suitable PMT-activity assays, well-defined substrates, novel SAM surrogates, and PMT inhibitors to interrogate PMTs.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Loss of BAP1 function leads to EZH2-dependent transformation

Lindsay M. LaFave; Wendy Béguelin; Richard Koche; Matt Teater; Barbara Spitzer; Alan Chramiec; Efthymia Papalexi; Matthew Keller; Todd Hricik; Katerina Konstantinoff; Jean Baptiste Micol; Benjamin H. Durham; Sarah K. Knutson; John E. Campbell; Gil Blum; Xinxu Shi; Emma H. Doud; Andrei V. Krivtsov; Young Rock Chung; Inna Khodos; Elisa de Stanchina; Ouathek Ouerfelli; Prasad S. Adusumilli; Paul M. Thomas; Neil L. Kelleher; Minkui Luo; Heike Keilhack; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Ari Melnick; Scott A. Armstrong

The tumor suppressors BAP1 and ASXL1 interact to form a polycomb deubiquitinase complex that removes monoubiquitin from histone H2A lysine 119 (H2AK119Ub). However, BAP1 and ASXL1 are mutated in distinct cancer types, consistent with independent roles in regulating epigenetic state and malignant transformation. Here we demonstrate that Bap1 loss in mice results in increased trimethylated histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3), elevated enhancer of zeste 2 polycomb repressive complex 2 subunit (Ezh2) expression, and enhanced repression of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) targets. These findings contrast with the reduction in H3K27me3 levels seen with Asxl1 loss. Conditional deletion of Bap1 and Ezh2 in vivo abrogates the myeloid progenitor expansion induced by Bap1 loss alone. Loss of BAP1 results in a marked decrease in H4K20 monomethylation (H4K20me1). Consistent with a role for H4K20me1 in the transcriptional regulation of EZH2, expression of SETD8—the H4K20me1 methyltransferase—reduces EZH2 expression and abrogates the proliferation of BAP1-mutant cells. Furthermore, mesothelioma cells that lack BAP1 are sensitive to EZH2 pharmacologic inhibition, suggesting a novel therapeutic approach for BAP1-mutant malignancies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Labeling Substrates of Protein Arginine Methyltransferase with Engineered Enzymes and Matched S-Adenosyl-L-methionine Analogues

Rui Wang; Weihong Zheng; Haiqiang Yu; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Elucidating physiological and pathogenic functions of protein methyltransferases (PMTs) relies on knowing their substrate profiles. S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) is the sole methyl-donor cofactor of PMTs. Recently, SAM analogues have emerged as novel small-molecule tools to efficiently label PMT substrates. Here we reported the development of a clickable SAM analogue cofactor, 4-propargyloxy-but-2-enyl SAM, and its implementation to label substrates of human protein arginine methyltransferase 1 (PRMT1). In the system, the SAM analogue cofactor, coupled with matched PRMT1 mutants rather than native PRMT1, was shown to label PRMT1 substrates. The transferable 4-propargyloxy-but-2-enyl moiety of the SAM analogue further allowed corresponding modified substrates to be characterized through a subsequent click chemical ligation with an azido-based probe. The SAM analogue, in combination with a rational protein-engineering approach, thus shows potential to label and identify PMT targets in the context of a complex cellular mixture.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2011

Expanding cofactor repertoire of protein lysine methyltransferase for substrate labeling.

Kabirul Islam; Weihong Zheng; Haiqiang Yu; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Protein lysine methyltransferases (PKMTs) play crucial roles in normal physiology and disease processes. Profiling PKMT targets is an important but challenging task. With cancer-relevant G9a as a target, we have demonstrated success in developing S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) analogues, particularly (E)-hex-2-en-5-ynyl SAM (Hey-SAM), as cofactors for engineered G9a. Hey-SAM analogue in combination with G9a Y1154A mutant modifies the same set of substrates as their native counterparts with remarkable efficiency. (E)-Hex-2-en-5-ynylated substrates undergo smooth click reaction with an azide-based probe. This approach is thus suitable for substrate characterization of G9a and expected to further serve as a starting point to evolve other PKMTs to utilize a similar set of cofactors.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Sinefungin Derivatives as Inhibitors and Structure Probes of Protein Lysine Methyltransferase SETD2

Weihong Zheng; Glorymar Ibáñez; Hong Wu; Gil Blum; Hong Zeng; Aiping Dong; Fengling Li; Taraneh Hajian; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Maria F. Amaya; Alena Siarheyeva; Wenyu Yu; Peter J. Brown; Matthieu Schapira; Masoud Vedadi; Jinrong Min; Minkui Luo

Epigenetic regulation is involved in numerous physiological and pathogenic processes. Among the key regulators that orchestrate epigenetic signaling are over 50 human protein lysine methyltransferases (PKMTs). Interrogation of the functions of individual PKMTs can be facilitated by target-specific PKMT inhibitors. Given the emerging need for such small molecules, we envisioned an approach to identify target-specific methyltransferase inhibitors by screening privileged small-molecule scaffolds against diverse methyltransferases. In this work, we demonstrated the feasibility of such an approach by identifying the inhibitors of SETD2. N-propyl sinefungin (Pr-SNF) was shown to interact preferentially with SETD2 by matching the distinct transition-state features of SETD2s catalytically active conformer. With Pr-SNF as a structure probe, we further revealed the dual roles of SETD2s post-SET loop in regulating substrate access through a distinct topological reconfiguration. Privileged sinefungin scaffolds are expected to have broad use as structure and chemical probes of methyltransferases.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Bioorthogonal profiling of protein methylation using azido derivative of S-adenosyl-L-methionine.

Kabirul Islam; Ian R. Bothwell; Yuling Chen; Caitlin Sengelaub; Rui Wang; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Protein methyltransferases (PMTs) play critical roles in multiple biological processes. Because PMTs often function in vivo through forming multimeric protein complexes, dissecting their activities in the native contexts is challenging but relevant. To address such a need, we envisioned a Bioorthogonal Profiling of Protein Methylation (BPPM) technology, in which a SAM analogue cofactor can be utilized by multiple rationally engineered PMTs to label substrates of the corresponding native PMTs. Here, 4-azidobut-2-enyl derivative of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (Ab-SAM) was reported as a suitable BPPM cofactor. The resultant cofactor-enzyme pairs were implemented to label specifically the substrates of closely related PMTs (e.g., EuHMT1 and EuHMT2) in a complex cellular mixture. The BPPM approach, coupled with mass spectrometric analysis, enables the identification of the nonhistone targets of EuHMT1/2. Comparison of EuHMT1/2s methylomes indicates that the two human PMTs, although similar in terms of their primary sequences, can act on the distinct sets of nonhistone targets. Given the conserved active sites of PMTs, Ab-SAM and its use in BPPM are expected to be transferable to other PMTs for target identification.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Profiling Genome-Wide Chromatin Methylation with Engineered Posttranslation Apparatus within Living Cells

Rui Wang; Kabirul Islam; Ying Liu; Weihong Zheng; Haiping Tang; Nathalie Lailler; Gil Blum; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Protein methyltransferases (PMTs) have emerged as important epigenetic regulators in myriad biological processes in both normal physiology and disease conditions. However, elucidating PMT-regulated epigenetic processes has been hampered by ambiguous knowledge about in vivo activities of individual PMTs particularly because of their overlapping but nonredundant functions. To address limitations of conventional approaches in mapping chromatin modification of specific PMTs, we have engineered the chromatin-modifying apparatus and formulated a novel technology, termed clickable chromatin enrichment with parallel DNA sequencing (CliEn-seq), to probe genome-wide chromatin modification within living cells. The three-step approach of CliEn-seq involves in vivo synthesis of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) analogues from cell-permeable methionine analogues by engineered SAM synthetase (methionine adenosyltransferase or MAT), in situ chromatin modification by engineered PMTs, subsequent enrichment and sequencing of the uniquely modified chromatins. Given critical roles of the chromatin-modifying enzymes in epigenetics and structural similarity among many PMTs, we envision that the CliEn-seq technology is generally applicable in deciphering chromatin methylation events of individual PMTs in diverse biological settings.


Cancer Cell | 2014

AF10 regulates progressive H3K79 methylation and HOX gene expression in diverse AML subtypes.

Aniruddha Deshpande; Anagha Deshpande; Amit U. Sinha; Liying Chen; Jenny Chang; Ali Cihan; Maurizio Fazio; Chun-Wei Chen; Nan Zhu; Richard Koche; Liuda Dzhekieva; Gloria Ibáñez; Stuart Dias; Deepti Banka; Andrei V. Krivtsov; Minkui Luo; Robert G. Roeder; James E. Bradner; Kathrin M. Bernt; Scott A. Armstrong

Homeotic (HOX) genes are dysregulated in multiple malignancies, including several AML subtypes. We demonstrate that H3K79 dimethylation (H3K79me2) is converted to monomethylation (H3K79me1) at HOX loci as hematopoietic cells mature, thus coinciding with a decrease in HOX gene expression. We show that H3K79 methyltransferase activity as well as H3K79me1-to-H3K79me2 conversion is regulated by the DOT1L cofactor AF10. AF10 inactivation reverses leukemia-associated epigenetic profiles, precludes abnormal HOXA gene expression, and impairs the transforming ability of MLL-AF9, MLL-AF6, and NUP98-NSD1 fusions-mechanistically distinct HOX-activating oncogenes. Furthermore, NUP98-NSD1-transformed cells are sensitive to small-molecule inhibition of DOT1L. Our findings demonstrate that pharmacological inhibition of the DOT1L/AF10 complex may provide therapeutic benefits in an array of malignancies with abnormal HOXA gene expression.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Se-adenosyl-L-selenomethionine cofactor analogue as a reporter of protein methylation.

Ian R. Bothwell; Kabirul Islam; Yuling Chen; Weihong Zheng; Gil Blum; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Posttranslational methylation by S-adenosyl-L-methionine(SAM)-dependent methyltransferases plays essential roles in modulating protein function in both normal and disease states. As such, there is a growing need to develop chemical reporters to examine the physiological and pathological roles of protein methyltransferases. Several sterically bulky SAM analogues have previously been used to label substrates of specific protein methyltransferases. However, broad application of these compounds has been limited by their general incompatibility with native enzymes. Here we report a SAM surrogate, ProSeAM (propargylic Se-adenosyl-l-selenomethionine), as a reporter of methyltransferases. ProSeAM can be processed by multiple protein methyltransferases for substrate labeling. In contrast, sulfur-based propargylic SAM undergoes rapid decomposition at physiological pH, likely via an allene intermediate. In conjunction with fluorescent/affinity-based azide probes, copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition chemistry, in-gel fluorescence visualization and proteomic analysis, we further demonstrated ProSeAMs utility to profile substrates of endogenous methyltransferases in diverse cellular contexts. These results thus feature ProSeAM as a convenient probe to study the activities of endogenous protein methyltransferases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Defining efficient enzyme-cofactor pairs for bioorthogonal profiling of protein methylation

Kabirul Islam; Yuling Chen; Hong Wu; Ian R. Bothwell; Gil Blum; Hong Zeng; Aiping Dong; Weihong Zheng; Jinrong Min; Haiteng Deng; Minkui Luo

Significance Many proteins undergo various posttranslational modifications for proper functions. One such modification is methylation carried out by enzyme–cofactor pairs of protein methyltransferases (PMTs) and S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM). Identification of methylated proteins is quite challenging because of the small size and chemical inertness of the methyl group. To address this challenge, we have synthesized SAM surrogates by replacing SAM’s methyl group with bulky, chemically active functionalities and demonstrated their utility as alternative cofactors of engineered PMTs for substrate labeling. Proteins modified with such chemical moieties are amenable to bioorthogonal reactions for subsequent enrichment and identification. An engineered enzyme–cofactor pair has been successfully used to reveal numerous methylated proteins. Protein methyltransferase (PMT)-mediated posttranslational modification of histone and nonhistone substrates modulates stability, localization, and interacting partners of target proteins in diverse cellular contexts. These events play critical roles in normal biological processes and are frequently deregulated in human diseases. In the course of identifying substrates of individual PMTs, bioorthogonal profiling of protein methylation (BPPM) has demonstrated its merits. In this approach, specific PMTs are engineered to process S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) analogs as cofactor surrogates and label their substrates with distinct chemical modifications for target elucidation. Despite the proof-of-concept advancement of BPPM, few efforts have been made to explore its generality. With two cancer-relevant PMTs, EuHMT1 (GLP1/KMT1D) and EuHMT2 (G9a/KMT1C), as models, we defined the key structural features of engineered PMTs and matched SAM analogs that can render the orthogonal enzyme–cofactor pairs for efficient catalysis. Here we have demonstrated that the presence of sulfonium-β-sp2 carbon and flexible, medium-sized sulfonium-δ-substituents are crucial for SAM analogs as BPPM reagents. The bulky cofactors can be accommodated by tailoring the conserved Y1211/Y1154 residues and nearby hydrophobic cavities of EuHMT1/2. Profiling proteome-wide substrates with BPPM allowed identification of >500 targets of EuHMT1/2 with representative targets validated using native EuHMT1/2 and SAM. This finding indicates that EuHMT1/2 may regulate many cellular events previously unrecognized to be modulated by methylation. The present work, therefore, paves the way to a broader application of the BPPM technology to profile methylomes of diverse PMTs and elucidate their downstream functions.

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Gil Blum

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Weihong Zheng

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Ian R. Bothwell

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Rui Wang

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Vern L. Schramm

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Glorymar Ibáñez

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Kabirul Islam

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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