Mutational analysis of the stability of the H2A and H2B histone monomers |
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Authors: | Stump Matthew R Gloss Lisa M |
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Affiliation: | School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-4660, USA |
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Abstract: | The eukaryotic histone heterodimer H2A-H2B folds through an obligatory dimeric intermediate that forms in a nearly diffusion-limited association reaction in the stopped-flow dead time. It is unclear whether there is partial folding of the isolated monomers before association. To address the possible contributions of structure in the monomers to the rapid association, we characterized H2A and H2B monomers in the absence of their heterodimeric partner. By far-UV circular dichroism, the H2A and H2B monomers are 15% and 31% helical, respectively—significantly less than observed in X-ray crystal structures. Acrylamide quenching of the intrinsic Tyr fluorescence was indicative of tertiary structure. The H2A and H2B monomers exhibit free energies of unfolding of 2.5 and 2.9 kcal mol− 1, respectively; at 10 μM, the sum of the stability of the monomers is ∼ 60% of the stability of the native dimer. The helical content, stability, and m values indicate that H2B has a more stable, compact structure than H2A. The monomer m values are larger than expected for the extended histone fold motif, suggesting that the monomers adopt an overly collapsed structure. Stopped-flow refolding—initiated from urea-denatured monomers or the partially folded monomers populated at low denaturant concentrations—yielded essentially identical rates, indicating that monomer folding is productive in the rapid association and folding of the heterodimer. A series of Ala and Gly mutations were introduced into H2A and H2B to probe the importance of helix propensity on the structure and stability of the monomers. The mutational studies show that the central α-helix of the histone fold, which makes extensive intermonomer contacts, is structured in H2B but only partially folded in H2A. |
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Keywords: | α1, α2, and α3, the first, second, and third helices, respectively, of the canonical histone fold αC, the C-terminal helices of H2A and H2B beyond the canonical histone fold CM, the concentration of urea at the midpoint of the equilibrium unfolding transition ΔASA, change in solvent accessible surface area between the native and unfolded species ΔG° (H2O), the free energy of unfolding in the absence of denaturant Fapp, apparent fraction of unfolded monomer FIS, E. coli Factor for Inversion Stimulation FL, fluorescence I2, dimeric folding intermediate KPi, potassium phosphate, pH 7.2 K2EDTA, dipotassium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid m value, parameter describing the sensitivity of the unfolding transition to the [Urea] 2M, two dissociated, partially folded monomers MRE, mean residue ellipticity, normalization of CD data for protein concentration and number of residues N2, native dimer NCP, nucleosome core particle SEC, size-exclusion chromatography SF, stopped flow TMAO, trimethylamine-N-oxide TR, Trp repressor 2U, two unfolded, dissociated monomers |
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