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The nucleosome assembly protein (NAP) family represents a key group of histone chaperones that are essential for cell viability. Several x-ray structures of NAP1 dimers are available; however, there are currently no structures of this ubiquitous chaperone in complex with histones. We have characterized NAP1 from Xenopus laevis and reveal that it forms discrete multimers with histones H2A/H2B and H3/H4 at a stoichiometry of one NAP dimer to one histone fold dimer. These complexes have been characterized by size exclusion chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation, multiangle laser light scattering, and small-angle x-ray scattering to reveal their oligomeric assembly states in solution. By employing single-particle cryo-electron microscopy, we visualized these complexes for the first time and show that they form heterogeneous ring-like structures, potentially acting as large scaffolds for histone assembly and exchange.  相似文献   

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While many proteins are involved in the assembly and (re)positioning of nucleosomes, the dynamics of protein-assisted nucleosome formation are not well understood. We study NAP1 (nucleosome assembly protein 1) assisted nucleosome formation at the single-molecule level using magnetic tweezers. This method allows to apply a well-defined stretching force and supercoiling density to a single DNA molecule, and to study in real time the change in linking number, stiffness and length of the DNA during nucleosome formation. We observe a decrease in end-to-end length when NAP1 and core histones (CH) are added to the dsDNA. We characterize the formation of complete nucleosomes by measuring the change in linking number of DNA, which is induced by the NAP1-assisted nucleosome assembly, and which does not occur for non-nucleosomal bound histones H3 and H4. By rotating the magnets, the supercoils formed upon nucleosome assembly are removed and the number of assembled nucleosomes can be counted. We find that the compaction of DNA at low force is about 56 nm per assembled nucleosome. The number of compaction steps and associated change in linking number indicate that NAP1-assisted nucleosome assembly is a two-step process.  相似文献   

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Nucleosome assembly protein 1 (Nap1) is widely conserved from yeasts to humans and facilitates nucleosome formation in vitro as a histone chaperone. Nap1 is generally localized in the cytoplasm, except that subcellular localization of Drosophila melanogaster Nap1 is dynamically regulated between the cytoplasm and nucleus during early development. The cytoplasmic localization of Nap1 is seemingly incompatible with the proposed role of Nap1 in nucleosome formation, which should occur in the nucleus. Here, we have examined the roles of a putative nuclear export signal (NES) sequence in yeast Nap1 (yNap1). yNap1 mutants lacking the NES-like sequence were localized predominantly in the nucleus. Deletion of NAP1 in cells harboring a single mitotic cyclin gene is known to cause mitotic delay and temperature-sensitive growth. A wild-type NAP1 complemented these phenotypes while nap1 mutant genes lacking the NES-like sequence or carboxy-terminal region did not. These and other results suggest that yNap1 is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein and that its shuttling is important for yNap1 function during mitotic progression. This study also provides a possible explanation for Nap1's involvement in nucleosome assembly and/or remodeling in the nucleus.  相似文献   

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Certain proteins can undergo polyglycylation and polyglutamylation. Polyglutamylases (glutamate ligases) have recently been identified in a family of tubulin tyrosine ligase-like (TTLL) proteins. However, no polyglycylase (glycine ligase) has yet been reported. Here we identify a polyglycylase in the TTLL proteins by using an anti-poly-glycine antibody. The antibody reacted with a cytoplasmic 60-kDa protein that accumulated in elongating spermatids. Using tandem mass spectrometry of trypsinized samples, immunoprecipitated by the antibody from the TTLL10-expressing cells, we identified the 60-kDa protein as nucleosome assembly protein 1 (NAP1). Recombinant TTLL10 incorporated glycine into recombinant NAP1 in vitro. Mutational analyses indicated that Glu residues at 359 and 360 in the C-terminal part of NAP1 are putative sites for the modification. Thus, TTLL10 is a polyglycylase for NAP1.  相似文献   

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Polyglutamylation is a post-translational modification that generates lateral acidic side chains on proteins by sequential addition of glutamate amino acids. This modification was first discovered on tubulins, and it is important for several microtubule functions. Besides tubulins, only the nucleosome assembly proteins NAP1 and NAP2 have been shown to be polyglutamylated. Here, using a proteomic approach, we identify a large number of putative substrates for polyglutamylation in HeLa cells. By analyzing a selection of these putative substrates, we show that several of them can serve as in vitro substrates for two of the recently discovered polyglutamylases, TTLL4 and TTLL5. We further show that TTLL4 is the main polyglutamylase enzyme present in HeLa cells and that new substrates of polyglutamylation are indeed modified by TTLL4 in a cellular context. No clear consensus polyglutamylation site could be defined from the primary sequence of the here-identified new substrates of polyglutamylation. However, we demonstrate that glutamate-rich stretches are important for a protein to become polyglutamylated. Most of the newly identified substrates of polyglutamylation are nucleocytoplasmic shuttling proteins, including many chromatin-binding proteins. Our work reveals that polyglutamylation is a much more widespread post-translational modification than initially thought and thus that it might be a regulator of many cellular processes.  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinase complexes that contain the same catalytic subunit are able to induce different events at different times during the cell cycle, but the mechanisms by which they do so remain largely unknown. To address this problem, we have used affinity chromatography to identify proteins that bind specifically to mitotic cyclins, with the goal of finding proteins that interact with mitotic cyclins to carry out the events of mitosis. This approach has led to the identification of a 60-kD protein called NAP1 that interacts specifically with members of the cyclin B family. This interaction has been highly conserved during evolution: NAP1 in the Xenopus embryo interacts with cyclins B1 and B2, but not with cyclin A, and the S. cerevisiae homolog of NAP1 interacts with Clb2 but not with Clb3. Genetic experiments in budding yeast indicate that NAP1 plays an important role in the function of Clb2, while biochemical experiments demonstrate that purified NAP1 can be phosphorylated by cyclin B/p34cdc2 kinase complexes, but not by cyclin A/p34cdc2 kinase complexes. These results suggest that NAP1 is a protein involved in the specific functions of cyclin B/p34cdc2 kinase complexes. In addition to NAP1, we found a 43-kD protein in Xenopus that is homologous to NAP1 and also interacts specifically with B-type cyclins. This protein is the Xenopus homolog of the human SET protein, which was previously identified as part of a putative oncogenic fusion protein (Von Lindern et al., 1992).  相似文献   

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The histone chaperone nucleosome assembly protein 1 (NAP1) is implicated in histone shuttling as well as nucleosome assembly and disassembly. Under physiological conditions, NAP1 dimers exist in a mixture of various high-molecular-weight oligomers whose size may be regulated by the cell cycle-dependent concentration of NAP1. Both the functional and structural significance of the observed oligomers are unknown. We have resolved the molecular mechanism by which yeast NAP1 (yNAP1) dimers oligomerize by applying x-ray crystallographic, hydrodynamic, and functional approaches. We found that an extended β-hairpin that protrudes from the compact core of the yNAP1 dimer forms a stable β-sheet with β-hairpins of neighboring yNAP1 dimers. Disruption of the β-hairpin (whose sequence is conserved among NAP1 proteins in various species) by the replacement of one or more amino acids with proline results in complete loss of yNAP1 dimer oligomerization. The in vitro functions of yNAP1 remain unaffected by the mutations. We have thus identified a conserved structural feature of NAP1 whose function, in addition to presenting the nuclear localization sequence, appears to be the formation of higher-order oligomers.  相似文献   

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Nucleosome assembly protein 1 (NAP1) binds to histone H2A-H2B heterodimers, mediating their deposition on and eviction from the nucleosome. Human NAP1 (hNAP1) consists of a dimerization core domain and intrinsically disordered C-terminal acidic domain (CTAD), both of which are essential for H2A-H2B binding. Several structures of NAP1 proteins bound to H2A-H2B exhibit binding polymorphisms of the core domain, but the distinct structural roles of the core and CTAD domains remain elusive. Here, we have examined dynamic structures of the full-length hNAP1 dimer bound to one and two H2A-H2B heterodimers by integrative methods. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of full-length hNAP1 showed CTAD binding to H2A-H2B. Atomic force microscopy revealed that hNAP1 forms oligomers of tandem repeated dimers; therefore, we generated a stable dimeric hNAP1 mutant exhibiting the same H2A-H2B binding affinity as wild-type hNAP1. Size exclusion chromatography (SEC), multi-angle light scattering (MALS) and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), followed by modelling and molecular dynamics simulations, have been used to reveal the stepwise dynamic complex structures of hNAP1 binding to one and two H2A-H2B heterodimers. The first H2A-H2B dimer binds mainly to the core domain of hNAP1, while the second H2A-H2B binds dynamically to both CTADs. Based on our findings, we present a model of the eviction of H2A-H2B from nucleosomes by NAP1.  相似文献   

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F. Duan  M. Chen  J. Deng  Z. Li 《Animal genetics》2016,47(4):507-509
Maternally imprinted genes of makorin ring finger protein 3 (MKRN3) and nucleosome assembly protein 1‐like 5 (NAP1L5) have been identified in many species but have not yet been investigated in rabbits. In this study, a polymorphism‐based approach and bisulfite‐sequencing PCR (BSP) were used to determine the imprinting status of MKRN3 and NAP1L5 in rabbits. The single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)‐based sequencing results demonstrated that MKRN3 and NAP1L5 were expressed preferentially from the paternal allele. Furthermore, the BSP results showed the gamete‐specific methylation patterns and hemimethylation in brain and full methylation in liver were observed in MKRN3 and NAP1L5 respectively. Thus, we provide the first evidence that MKRN3 and NAP1L5 are paternally expressed genes and that the CpG islands located in the promoter region may be the putative differentially methylated region of these two genes in rabbits.  相似文献   

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High speed supernatants of Xenopus laevis oocyte nuclei efficiently assemble DNA into nucleosomes in vitro under physiological salt conditions. The assembly activity cofractionates with two histone complexes composed of the acidic protein N1/N2 in complex with histones H3 and H4, and nucleoplasmin in complex with histones H2B and H2A. Both histone complexes have been purified and their nucleosome assembly activities have been analysed separately and in combination. While the histones from the N1/N2 complexes are efficiently transferred to DNA and induce supercoils into relaxed circular plasmid DNA, the nucleoplasmin complexes show no supercoil induction, but can also transfer their histones to DNA. In combination, the complexes act synergistically in supercoil induction thereby increasing the velocity and the number of supercoils induced. Electron microscopic analysis of the reaction products shows fully packaged nucleoprotein structures with the typical nucleosomal appearance resulting in a compaction ratio of 2.8 under low ionic strength conditions. The high mobility group protein HMG-1, which is also present in the soluble nuclear homogenate from X. laevis oocytes, is not required for nucleosome core assembly. Fractionation experiments show that the synergistic effect in the supercoiling reaction can be exerted by histones H3 and H4 bound to DNA and the nucleoplasmin complexes alone. This indicates that it is not the synchronous action of both complexes which is required for nucleosome assembly, but that their cooperative action can be resolved into two steps: deposition of H3 and H4 from the N1/N2 complexes onto the DNA and completion of nucleosome core formation by addition of H2B and H2A from the nucleoplasmin complexes.  相似文献   

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We analyze the nucleosome core assembly reaction which is mediated in vitro by a protein previously purified from Xenopus laevis eggs, now named nucleoplasmin in reference to its occurrence in the soluble phase of the nucleus of a wide range of vertebrate cell types. Nucleoplasmin is present in solution as a pentamer. We use nuclease digestion analysis to show that the protein assembles bona fide nucleosome cores in vitro from purified histones and DNA. Nucleoplasmin itself binds neither to DNA nor to the nucleoprotein particles which it assembles in vitro. However, it interacts with histones in vitro in such a way that histones no longer adhere to negatively charged surfaces. We have found no evidence for sterically specific interactions with particular histones. The initial rate of the nucleosome core assembly reaction mediated by purified nucleoplasmin in vitro is essentially identical with the rate of the nucleosome assembly reaction which occurs in the cell-free extracts of Xenopus eggs from which nucleoplasmin was purified. This rate is sufficient to account for the rate of nucleosome assembly required during the early development of Xenopus embryos.  相似文献   

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The nucleosome assembly protein-1 (NAP1) was originally identified in HeLa cells as a factor facilitating the in vitro assembly of nucleosomes. However, in yeast cells NAP1 is required in the control of mitotic events induced by the Clb2/p34(CDC28). Here, we show that Drosophila NAP1 is a phosphoprotein that is associated with a kinase able to phosphorylate NAP1. By using an in-gel kinase assay we found that this kinase displays a molecular mass of 38 kDa. Following purification and peptide microsequencing, we identified the kinase phosphorylating NAP1 as the alpha subunit of casein kinase 2 (CK2). With the help of a series of NAP1 segments and synthetic peptides, we assigned the CK2 phosphorylation sites to residues Ser118, Thr120, and Ser284. Interestingly, Ser118 and Thr120 are located within a PEST domain, while Ser284 is adjacent to the nuclear localization signal. Substitution of the identified phosphoresidues by alanine was found to reduce considerably the ability of CK2 to phosphorylate NAP1. The enhanced ability of CK2 to phosphorylate phosphatase-treated NAP1 extracted from Drosophila embryos and the similar tryptic phospho-peptide pattern of in vivo labelled NAP1 and in vitro labelled NAP1 with CK2 indicate that NAP1 is a natural substrate of CK2. Further analysis revealed that both CK2alpha and beta subunits are associated with NAP1 but we found that only the catalytic alpha subunit establishes direct contact with NAP1 on two distinct domains of this protein. The location of CK2 phosphorylation sites in NAP1 suggests that their phosphorylation can contribute to a PEST-mediated protein degradation of NAP1 and the translocation of NAP1 between cytoplasm and nucleus.  相似文献   

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