Deciphering the endogenous interactors of histone post-translational
modifications (hPTMs, also called histone marks) is essential to understand
the mechanisms of epigenetic regulation. However, most of the analytical
methods to determine hPTM interactomes are in vitro settings, lacking
interrogating native chromatin. Although lysine crotonylation (Kcr)
has recently been considered an important hPTM for the regulation
of gene transcription, the interactors of Kcr still remain to be explored.
Herein, we present a general approach relying upon a genetic code
expansion system, APEX2 (engineered peroxidase)-mediated proximity
labeling, and quantitative proteomics to profile interactomes of the
selected hPTMs in living cells. We genetically fused APEX2 to the
recombinant histone H3 with a crotonyl lysine inserted site specifically
to generate APEX2–H3K9cr that incorporated into native chromatin.
Upon activation, APEX2 triggered in vivo biotin labeling of H3K9cr
interactors that can then be enriched with streptavidin beads and
identified by mass spectrometry. Proteomic analysis further revealed
the endogenous interactomes of H3K9cr and confirmed the reliability
of the method. Moreover, DPF2 was identified as a candidate interactor,
and the binding interaction of DPF2 to H3K9c was further characterized
and verified. This study provides a novel strategy for the identification
of hPTM interactomes in living cells, and we envision that this is
key to elucidating epigenetic regulatory pathways