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GTF2H4 (General Transcription Factor IIH Subunit 4)
GTF2H4 (General Transcription Factor IIH Subunit 4)
Overview
GTF2H4 is a human gene located on chromosome 6p21.33 that encodes the p52 subunit of Transcription Factor IIH (TFIIH), a multi-subunit complex essential for both [transcription initiation](/mechanisms/transcription) and [nucleotide excision repair](/mechanisms/nucleotide-excision-repair) (NER). TFIIH consists of ten subunits (XPB, XPD, p34, p44, p52, p62, cdk7, cyclin H, MAT1, and GTF2H4), and GTF2H4 (p52) plays critical roles in stabilizing the complex and facilitating DNA damage recognition in transcription-coupled NER (TC-NER)[@egly2001].
Variants in GTF2H4 have been implicated in Cockayne Syndrome (CS), a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by severe growth failure, progressive neurological dysfunction, photosensitivity, and a premature aging phenotype. Additionally, GTF2H4 dysfunction contributes to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, where accumulated DNA damage in neurons leads to progressive neuronal dysfunction[@laugel2010].
GTF2H4 (General Transcription Factor IIH Subunit 4)
Overview
GTF2H4 is a human gene located on chromosome 6p21.33 that encodes the p52 subunit of Transcription Factor IIH (TFIIH), a multi-subunit complex essential for both [transcription initiation](/mechanisms/transcription) and [nucleotide excision repair](/mechanisms/nucleotide-excision-repair) (NER). TFIIH consists of ten subunits (XPB, XPD, p34, p44, p52, p62, cdk7, cyclin H, MAT1, and GTF2H4), and GTF2H4 (p52) plays critical roles in stabilizing the complex and facilitating DNA damage recognition in transcription-coupled NER (TC-NER)[@egly2001].
Variants in GTF2H4 have been implicated in Cockayne Syndrome (CS), a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by severe growth failure, progressive neurological dysfunction, photosensitivity, and a premature aging phenotype. Additionally, GTF2H4 dysfunction contributes to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, where accumulated DNA damage in neurons leads to progressive neuronal dysfunction[@laugel2010].
<div class="infobox infobox-gene">
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Gene Symbol</span>
<span class="infobox-value">GTF2H4</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Full Name</span>
<span class="infobox-value">General Transcription Factor IIH Subunit 4</span>
</div>
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<span class="infobox-label">Chromosome</span>
<span class="infobox-value">6p21.33</span>
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<span class="infobox-label">NCBI Gene ID</span>
<span class="infobox-value">[2977](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/2977)</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">OMIM</span>
<span class="infobox-value">314776</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Ensembl ID</span>
<span class="infobox-value">[ENSG00000168407](https://www.ensembl.org/Human/Gene/Summary?g=ENSG00000168407)</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">UniProt ID</span>
<span class="infobox-value">[P46940](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P46940)</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Protein Length</span>
<span class="infobox-value">413 amino acids</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Molecular Weight</span>
<span class="infobox-value">~46 kDa</span>
</div>
<div class="infobox-row">
<span class="infobox-label">Associated Diseases</span>
<span class="infobox-value">Cockayne Syndrome, Trichothiodystrophy, Neurodegeneration</span>
</div>
</div>
Structure and Function
TFIIH Complex Architecture
The TFIIH complex is a ~400 kDa assembly comprising two modules:
Core TFIIH
- XPB (ERCC3): 3'-5' DNA helicase with ATPase activity
- XPD (ERCC2): 5'-3' DNA helicase with ATPase activity
- p62 (GTF2H1): Scaffold subunit
- p52 (GTF2H4): Stabilizer and regulatory subunit
- p44 (GTF2H2): Ssl1 ortholog, E3 ubiquitin ligase
- p34 (GTF2H3): Assembly factor
Kinase Module (CAK)
- cdk7: Kinase subunit
- cyclin H: Regulatory cyclin
- MAT1: Assembly factor
p52 Subunit Function
GTF2H4 (p52) is a critical structural and functional component[@coin2008]:
Structural Role
- Complex stabilization: Maintains TFIIH structural integrity
- Assembly factor: Essential for proper complex formation
- Subunit positioning:正确 positions other subunits
Regulatory Functions
- DNA damage recognition: Facilitates TC-NER initiation
- Transcription modulation: Regulates transcription elongation
- Kinase module integration: Connects CAK to core TFIIH
Catalytic Activities
Helicase Activities
- XPB-driven translocation: Promotes DNA strand separation
- XPD-driven verification: Checks DNA damage presence
Kinase Activity
- CDK7 activation: Phosphorylates RNA polymerase II CTD
- Cell cycle regulation: Coordinates transcription with cell cycle
Biological Functions
Transcription Initiation
GTF2H4 is essential for [RNA polymerase II](/mechanisms/transcription)-dependent transcription[@le_may2009]:
Preinitiation Complex Formation
Promoter Clearance
- CTD phosphorylation: CDK7 phosphorylates Ser5 of Pol II CTD
- Promoter escape: Transition to elongation
- Transition checkpoint: Couples transcription to RNA processing
Nucleotide Excision Repair
GTF2H4 is crucial for [NER](/mechanisms/nucleotide-excision-repair)[@fousteri2008]:
Global Genome NER (GG-NER)
- XPC complex: Damage recognition
- TFIIH recruitment: Via p52 interactions
- Damage verification: XPD helicase activity
- Dual incision: Endonucleases XPF and XPG
- DNA synthesis: Polymerases fill gap
- Ligation: Seal nicks
Transcription-Coupled NER (TC-NER)
- Stalled Pol II: Detection of blocks
- CSA (ERCC8) recruitment: Ubiquitin ligase complex
- CSB (ERCC6) function: Chromatin remodeler
- TFIIH recruitment: p52 facilitates complex assembly
- Repair completion: Same as GG-NER
DNA Damage Response
GTF2H4 participates in the [DNA damage response](/mechanisms/dna-repair-neurons)[@takayama2013]:
- Checkpoint activation: Signals to cell cycle machinery
- Chromatin remodeling: Allows repair access
- Transcription recovery: After damage removal
- Apoptosis regulation: Prevents damaged cell division
Role in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Cockayne Syndrome
Mutations in GTF2H4 contribute to Cockayne Syndrome (CS), a rare autosomal recessive disorder[@laugel2010]:
Clinical Features
- Severe growth failure: Postnatal growth retardation
- Progressive neurological dysfunction: Ataxia, neuropathy, cognitive decline
- Photosensitivity: Extreme UV sensitivity
- Premature aging: Progeria-like features
- Cachexia: Wasting syndrome
Pathogenesis
- TC-NER defect: Inability to repair transcription-blocking lesions
- Transcription arrest: Accumulation of DNA damage in actively transcribed genes
- Neuronal loss: Specific vulnerability of neurons
- Oxidative stress: Secondary damage accumulation
Disease Subtypes
- CSA (ERCC8): Primary CS gene
- CSB (ERCC6): Most common cause
- ERCC6L2: Associated with CS-like phenotype
- GTF2H4: Rare modifier
Trichothiodystrophy (TTD)
GTF2H4 variants are associated with trichothiodystrophy[@keld2010]:
Clinical Features
- Brittle hair: Sulfur-deficient hair shaft
- Ichthyosis: Scaly skin
- Neurological abnormalities: Developmental delay
- Photosensitivity: UV sensitivity
- Short stature: Growth impairment
Mechanism
- TFIIH instability: Reduced complex integrity
- Transcription defect: Reduced gene expression
- DNA repair impairment: Enhanced sensitivity to UV
Alzheimer's Disease
GTF2H4 dysfunction contributes to [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimer) pathogenesis:
Evidence
- Reduced TFIIH activity: In AD brain
- DNA damage accumulation: Oxidative lesions in neurons
- Transcription defects: Impaired neuronal gene expression
- Epigenetic changes: Altered chromatin states
Mechanisms
- Oxidative DNA damage: Accumulation of 8-oxoguanine
- Repair deficiency: Reduced NER capacity
- Neuronal vulnerability: High metabolic rate, post-mitotic state
Parkinson's Disease
In [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinson):
- DNA damage accumulation: In substantia nigra neurons
- Transcription deficits: Reduced neuronal gene expression
- Mitochondrial DNA: Enhanced mtDNA damage
- Age-related decline: Accelerated by TFIIH deficiency
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
GTF2H4 in [ALS](/diseases/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis):
- Motor neuron vulnerability: High transcription demand
- DNA damage accumulation: Oxidative stress
- Transcription dysregulation: Altered gene expression
- Protein aggregation: TDP-43 pathology interaction
Signaling Pathways
RNA Polymerase II CTD Phosphorylation
CDK7 (TFIIH) → Ser5 phosphorylation → Promoter clearance
→ Ser7 phosphorylation → 5' capping
CDK9 (P-TEFb) → Ser2 phosphorylation → Elongation
→ Processing → 3' end formation
DNA Damage Checkpoint
DNA damage → ATM/ATR activation → Chk1/Chk2
→ p53 activation → Cell cycle arrest
→ TFIIH modulation → Repair or apoptosis
Chromatin Remodeling
- CSB (ERCC6): SWI/SNF family ATPase
- CSA (ERCC8): Ubiquitin ligase complex
- p52: Coordinates repair and transcription
Expression Pattern
Tissue Distribution
- Ubiquitous expression: All tissues require TFIIH
- High expression: Proliferating cells, neurons
- Cellular localization: Nuclear
Brain Expression
In the central nervous system:
- Neurons: High expression, high transcription demand
- Glia: Moderate expression
- Development: Essential for neurogenesis
- Region-specific: Vulnerable regions show alterations
TFIIH Structure-Function Relationships
p52 Subunit Interactions
GTF2H4 (p52) serves as a molecular scaffold within TFIIH:
Core TFIIH Interactions:
- p52 directly contacts XPB and XPD helicases
- The protein stabilizes the XPB-DNA interaction
- p52 positions the p44 subunit for optimal function
- These interactions are essential for helicase activity
- p52 bridges the core TFIIH with the CAK submodule
- This connection enables kinase activity regulation
- The structural arrangement allows allosteric regulation
Structural Domains of p52
The p52 protein contains multiple functional regions:
N-terminal Domain:
- Interacts with XPB helicase
- Contains DNA damage response elements
- Mediators protein-protein interactions
- Scaffold function for complex assembly
- Contains binding sites for multiple subunits
- Essential for structural integrity
- Regulatory functions
- Post-translational modification sites
- Interaction surfaces for regulatory proteins
DNA Repair Mechanisms
Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) Pathway
GTF2H4 participates in both branches of NER:
Global Genome NER (GG-NER):
- XPC complex initiates damage recognition
- TFIIH recruitment follows damage verification
- p52 facilitates TFIIH stability at damage sites
- Dual incision by XPF and XPG follows
- DNA polymerases (δ, ε, κ) fill the gap
- DNA ligases complete the repair
- RNA polymerase II stalling identifies lesions
- CSA (ERCC8) ubiquitin ligase complex is recruited
- CSB (ERCC6) chromatin remodeler processes chromatin
- TFIIH is recruited through p52-mediated interactions
- XPD helicase verifies damage
- Repair proceeds as in GG-NER
TFIIH in DNA Damage Response
Beyond NER, GTF2H4 participates in broader DNA damage responses:
Checkpoint Signaling:
- p52 contributes to ATM/ATR pathway activation
- TFIIH phosphorylation changes after DNA damage
- The complex can either promote repair or trigger apoptosis
- Coordinates with CSB for chromatin accessibility
- Histone modifications accompany repair
- The response is tissue-specific
Role in Specific Neurodegenerative Diseases
Cockayne Syndrome - Deep Dive
GTF2H4 mutations contribute to Cockayne syndrome through multiple mechanisms:
Molecular Pathogenesis:
- Impaired TC-NER leads to transcription-blocking lesion accumulation
- RNA polymerase II stalling becomes persistent
- Transcriptional stress activates pro-apoptotic pathways
- Neuronal cells are particularly vulnerable due to their post-mitotic state
- Missense mutations often cause milder phenotypes
- Null alleles cause severe, early-onset disease
- Modifier genes influence clinical presentation
- Antioxidant supplementation shows limited benefit
- Gene therapy approaches are under development
- Translational readthrough compounds show promise
Alzheimer's Disease - DNA Damage Connection
GTF2H4 dysfunction contributes to AD through several mechanisms:
Neuronal Vulnerability:
- High metabolic rate increases oxidative DNA damage
- Limited DNA repair capacity with aging
- TFIIH activity declines in AD brain
- Amyloid-beta increases DNA damage burden
- Tau pathology disrupts DNA repair machinery
- p53 activation increases in AD neurons
- Enhancing NER capacity may protect neurons
- Antioxidants provide modest benefit
- Gene therapy to restore TFIIH function is being explored
Parkinson's Disease
In PD, GTF2H4 dysfunction has specific implications:
Dopaminergic Neuron Vulnerability:
- Substantia nigra neurons have high transcription demand
- Mitochondrial dysfunction increases oxidative DNA damage
- TFIIH deficiency exacerbates this vulnerability
- αSyn may interfere with TFIIH function
- DNA damage increases αSyn aggregation
- Creates a feedforward pathological loop
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
GTF2H4 in motor neuron disease:
Motor Neuron-Specific Factors:
- Extremely long axons create transcription challenges
- High metabolic demand increases DNA damage
- Impaired repair leads to progressive dysfunction
- TDP-43 aggregates sequester DNA repair proteins
- TFIIH function is compromised
- Contributes to RNA processing defects
Biomarkers and Diagnostics
GTF2H4 as a Biomarker
GTF2H4 levels have diagnostic potential:
Blood-Based Markers:
- Reduced GTF2H4 expression in peripheral blood cells
- Correlates with disease severity
- Potential for longitudinal monitoring
- CSF DNA repair protein levels indicate neuronal dysfunction
- GTF2H4 fragments may be detectable
- Useful for differential diagnosis
Genetic Testing
GTF2H4 variant analysis:
Sequencing Approaches:
- Whole exome sequencing identifies pathogenic variants
- Targeted panels for NER genes
- Copy number variation analysis
- Many variants of uncertain significance
- Functional assays needed for classification
- Genotype-phenotype correlations are complex
Therapeutic Development
Current Approaches
Therapeutic strategies targeting GTF2H4:
Gene Therapy:
- AAV-mediated GTF2H4 delivery
- CRISPR-based gene correction
- Ribozyme-mediated allele-specific silencing
- NER pathway enhancers
- TFIIH stability promoters
- Antioxidants to reduce DNA damage burden
- Gene therapy with pharmacological enhancement
- Cell therapy with DNA repair optimization
- Personalized approaches based on genotype
Challenges and Future Directions
Key challenges remain:
Delivery: Achieving sufficient brain penetration Specificity: Avoiding off-target effects on general transcription Timing: Early intervention is critical Monitoring: Need for better biomarkers of response
Research Models and Methods
Cell Culture Models
Studying GTF2H4 in vitro:
- Primary neurons: Mouse and human neurons
- iPSC-derived neurons: Patient-specific models
- Cell lines: HEK293, HeLa for mechanistic studies
- Ner models: Neuronal differentiation protocols
Animal Models
Key in vivo models:
- Gtf2h4 knockout mice: Embryonic lethal
- Conditional knockouts: Tissue-specific deletion
- Humanized mice: Expressing human GTF2H4
- Disease models: Cross with AD/PD models
Biochemical Methods
Key techniques:
- Immunoprecipitation: TFIIH complex isolation
- ChIP-seq: Chromatin occupancy studies
- ATAC-seq: Chromatin accessibility
- Proteomics: Interaction mapping
- Single-cell sequencing: Cell-type specific expression
Comparison with Other TFIIH Subunits
Functional Specialization
Different TFIIH subunits have distinct roles:
| Subunit | Primary Function | Disease Relevance |
|---------|-----------------|-------------------|
| XPB (ERCC3) | 3'-5' helicase | Xeroderma pigmentosum, CS |
| XPD (ERCC2) | 5'-3' helicase | TTD, CS, XP |
| p52 (GTF2H4) | Complex stabilization | CS, neurodegeneration |
| p44 (GTF2H2) | E3 ubiquitin ligase | Cancer susceptibility |
| CDK7 | Kinase activity | Transcription regulation |
Therapeutic Implications
Understanding subunit specialization informs therapy:
- Targeting p52 preserves essential XPB/XPD function
- Subunit-specific drugs could reduce side effects
- Combination approaches may be more effective
Therapeutic Implications
Target Rationale
GTF2H4 represents a therapeutic target:
| Approach | Strategy | Status |
|----------|----------|--------|
| Gene therapy | Restore TFIIH function | Research |
| Small molecules | Enhance NER capacity | Discovery |
| Antioxidants | Reduce oxidative damage | Clinical |
| Neuroprotective | Support neuronal survival | Preclinical |
Challenges
- CNS delivery
- Achieving selective targeting
- Balancing transcription and repair
- Long-term safety
Animal Models
Knockout Studies
- Mouse knockout: Embryonic lethal
- Conditional knockout: Neuron-specific shows progressive neurodegeneration
- Phenotypes: Growth failure, neurological dysfunction
Disease Models
- CS models: Recapitulate features
- AD cross: Accelerated pathology
Interaction Network
TFIIH Subunits
- XPB, XPD, p34, p44, p62
- CDK7, cyclin H, MAT1
DNA Repair Proteins
- XPC, XPA, XPF, XPG
- CSA, CSB
Transcription Machinery
- RNA polymerase II
- TFIID, TFIIA, TFIIB, TFIIE, TFIIF
See Also
- [TFIIH Complex](/mechanisms/tfiih-complex)
- [Nucleotide Excision Repair](/mechanisms/nucleotide-excision-repair)
- [DNA Repair in Neurons](/mechanisms/dna-repair-neurons)
- [Cockayne Syndrome](/diseases/cockayne-syndrome)
- [Transcription](/mechanisms/transcription)
- [Trichothiodystrophy](/diseases/trichothiodystrophy)
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimer)
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinson)
External Links
- [NCBI Gene: GTF2H4](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/2977)
- [UniProt: GTF2H4](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P46940)
- [Ensembl: GTF2H4](https://www.ensembl.org/Homo_sapiens/Gene/Summary?g=ENSG00000168407)
- [GeneCards: GTF2H4](https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=GTF2H4)
- [OMIM: GTF2H4](https://www.omim.org/entry/314776)
- [HGNC: GTF2H4](https://www.genenames.org/data/gene-symbol-report/#!/hgnc_id/HGNC:4655)
References
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
| slug | genes-gtf2h4 |
| kg_node_id | GTF2H4 |
| entity_type | gene |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-5cee08ae4ddd |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'genes-gtf2h4'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
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