# Structural insight into hierarchical DNMT3A autoinhibition and its dysregulation in disease

**Authors:** Jiuwei Lu, Emily Vig, Jianbin Chen, Kristjan H. Gretarsson, Nelli Khudaverdyan, Zengyu Shao, Chao Lu, Chia-en A. Chang, Jikui Song

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-69563-1 · 2026-02-18

## TL;DR

This study reveals how DNMT3A regulates DNA methylation through structural interactions and how disease mutations disrupt this regulation.

## Contribution

The paper provides structural and molecular insights into DNMT3A autoinhibition and its dysregulation in disease.

## Key findings

- The cryo-EM structure of DNMT3A2 with DNMT3L reveals multilayered autoinhibition via domain interactions.
- Molecular dynamics simulations show how autoinhibition is relieved for DNA binding and activation.
- Disease-associated DNMT3A mutations impair autoinhibition and substrate specificity.

## Abstract

DNA methyltransferase DNMT3A-mediated DNA methylation is important for genomic imprinting and transcriptional regulation. However, how the regulatory domains of DNMT3A cooperate with its methyltransferase domain and histone marks to orchestrate genomic methylation remains unclear. Here we report the cryo-EM structure of DNMT3A2 with regulatory factor DNMT3L, revealing an intricate domain interaction underlying multilayered autoinhibition. The PWWP domain interacts with the ADD and methyltransferase domains to block the target recognition domain and the H3K36me2-binding pocket, thereby coupling the H3K36me2 binding with DNMT3A activation, adding a layer of allosteric regulation distinct from the previously characterized ADD-H3K4me0 regulation. Molecular dynamics simulations of the DNMT3A-DNMT3L complex further reveals that relief of DNMT3A autoinhibition involves disengagement of the CpG-recognition loop of the target recognition domain from autoinhibitory interaction, leading to enhanced accessibility of the target recognition domain loop for DNA binding and DNMT3A activation. Importantly, our combined structural, biochemical and genomic methylation analysis demonstrates that disrupting the PWWP-ADD interaction by disease-associated DNMT3A mutations leads to impaired DNMT3A autoinhibition and substrate specificity, providing a potential explanation to aberrant DNA methylation in disease.

The details of how the DNMT3A regulatory domains cooperate with its methyltransferase domain and with histone marks remained unclear. Here, the authors use structural biology and molecular dynamics to better understand this interaction.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** DNMT3A (DNA methyltransferase 3 alpha) [NCBI Gene 1788], DNMT3L (DNA methyltransferase 3 like) [NCBI Gene 29947]
- **Proteins:** DNMT3A (DNA methyltransferase 3 alpha), DNMT3L (DNA methyltransferase 3 like)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** DNMT3A (DNA methyltransferase 3 alpha) [NCBI Gene 1788] {aka DNMT3A2, HESJAS, M.HsaIIIA, TBRS}, DNMT3L (DNA methyltransferase 3 like) [NCBI Gene 29947]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13031684/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13031684