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1.
The filter-binding technique with PEI treated glass fiber is used to study the interaction of histone H5 to core particles, chromatosomes and DNA derived from it. By working at very low concentrations of interacting particles we are able to study the effective binding process independent of interfering insoluble complexes. The interactions are characterized by a very high affinity. An intrinsically higher affinity of H5 for cores and chromatosomes versus chromatosome derived DNA is demonstrated. Both chromatosomes and DNA derived from these bind about twice the amount as compared to core particles, which saturate at about one H5 per core particle.Abbreviations GH5 globular domain of histone H5 - PEI polyethyleneimine  相似文献   

2.
Crystallization of the globular domain of histone H5   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The globular domain of histone H1/H5 binds to the nucleosome and is crucial for the formation of chromatin higher order structure. We have expressed in Escherichia coli a gene that codes for the globular domain of H5. The protein produced in E. coli is functional in nucleosome binding assays. We have obtained crystals of the protein that diffract to beyond 2.5 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution. The crystals are orthorhombic with unit cell dimensions of a = 80.1 A, b = 67.5 A and c = 38.0 A.  相似文献   

3.
The globular domain of histone H5 (GH5) was prepared by trypsin digestion of H5 that was extracted from chicken erythrocyte nuclei with NaCl. Electron microscopy, sucrose gradient centrifugation, native agarose gel electrophoresis and equilibrium density gradient ultracentrifugation show that GH5 binds co-operatively to double-stranded DNA. The electron microscopic images suggest that the GH5-DNA complexes are very similar in structure to co-operative complexes of intact histone H1 (or its variants) with double-stranded DNA, studied previously, which have been proposed to consist of two parallel DNA double helices sandwiching a polymer of the protein. For complexes with GH5 or with intact H1, naked DNA co-sediments with the protein-DNA complexes through sucrose gradients, and DNA also appears to protrude from the ends and sides of the complexes; measurements of the protein-DNA stoichiometry in fractionated samples may not reflect the stoichiometry in the complexes. An estimate of the stoichiometry obtained from the buoyant density of fixed GH5-DNA complexes in CsCl suggests that sufficient GH5 is present in the complexes for the GH5s to be in direct contact, as required by a simple molecular mechanism for the co-operative binding. Chemical crosslinking demonstrates that GH5s are in close proximity in the complexes. In the absence of DNA, GH5-GH5 interactions are weak or non-existent.  相似文献   

4.
Histone H5 contains three tyrosines in the central, apolar region of the molecule. All three tyrosines can be spin labeled at low ionic strength. When the central globular domain is folded at high ionic strength, only one tyrosine becomes accessible to the imidazole spin label. Spin labeling the buried tyrosines prevents the folding of the globular structure, which, in turn, affects the proper binding of the H5 molecule to stripped chromatin. Chromatin complexes reconstituted from such an extensively modified H5 molecule show a weaker protection of the 168 base pair chromatosome during nuclease digestion. However, when only the surface tyrosine of the H5 molecule is labeled, such a molecule can still bind correctly to stripped chromatin, yielding a complex very similar to that of native chromatin. Our data supports the idea that not just the presence of the linker histone H5, but the presence of an intact H5 molecule with a folded, globular central domain in essential in the recognition of its specific binding sites on the nucleosomes. Our data also show that during the chromatin condensation process, the tumbling environment of the spin label attached to the surface tyrosine in the H5 molecule is not greatly hindered but remains partially mobile. This suggests that either the labeled domain of the H5 molecule is not directly involved in the condensation process or the formation of the higher-order chromatin structure does not result is a more viscous or tighter environment around the spin label. The folded globular domain of H5 molecule serves in stabilizing the nucleosome structure, as well as the higher-order chromatin structure.  相似文献   

5.
Cooperative interaction of the C-terminal domain of histone H1 with DNA   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have studied the interaction of the isolated C-terminal domain of histone H1 with linear DNA using precipitation curves and electron microscopy. The C-terminal domain shows a salt-dependent transition towards cooperative binding, which reaches completion at 60 mM NaCl. At this salt concentration, the C-terminal domain binds to some of the DNA molecules, leaving the rest free. A binding site of 22 base-pairs can be calculated from the stoichiometry of the precipitated fractions. The C-terminal domain condenses the DNA in toroidal particles. The average inner radius of the particles is of the order of 195 A. Consideration of the value of the inner radius of the toroids in the light of counterion condensation theory suggests that in these complexes the isolated C-terminal domain is capable of nearly full electrostatic neutralization of the DNA phosphate charge.  相似文献   

6.
Histone H5 has been labelled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) with particular attention to the reaction conditions (pH, reaction time and input FITC/H5 molar ratio) and to the complete elimination of non-covalently bound dye. We preferred to use reaction conditions which yielded non-specific uniform labelling rather than specific alpha-NH2 terminal labelling, in order to obtain higher sensitivity in further studies dealing with the detection of perturbation at the binding sites of H5 on DNA. FITC-labelled H5 was further characterized by absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy, and the fluorescein probe titrated in the 4-8 pH range. The structural integrity of H5 was found to be preserved after labelling. The positive electrostatic potential of the environment in which the FITC probe is embedded in the arginine/lysine-rich tails of H5 is believed to be responsible for the drop of pK of 1 unit found for H5-FITC as compared to free FITC. For the globular part of H5, the pK of covalently-bound FITC was only slightly lowered; this is a consequence of the much lower content in positively-charged amino-acid side chains in this region.  相似文献   

7.
The nature of the complexes of histones H1 and H5 and their globular domains (GH1 and GH5) with DNA suggested two DNA-binding sites which are likely to be the basis of the preference of H1 and H5 for the nucleosome, compared with free DNA. More recently the X-ray and NMR structures of GH5 and GH1, respectively, have identified two basic clusters on opposite sides of the domains as candidates for these sites. Removal of the positive charge at either location by mutagenesis impairs or abolishes the ability of GH5 to assemble cooperatively in ''tramline'' complexes containing two DNA duplexes, suggesting impairment or loss of its ability to bind two DNA duplexes. The mutant forms of GH5 also fail to protect the additional 20 bp of nucleosomal DNA that are characteristically protected by H1, H5 and wild-type recombinant GH5. They still bind to H1/H5-depleted chromatin, but evidently inappropriately. These results confirm the existence of, and identify the major components of, two DNA-binding sites on the globular domain of histone H5, and they strongly suggest that both binding sites are required to position the globular domain correctly on the nucleosome.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of histone H5 labelled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) with DNA has been studied by fluorescence titration, and diffusion-enhanced fluorescence energy transfer (DEFET) measurements with Tb(III) lanthanide chelates as donors. Analysis of the binding data by the model of Schwarz and Watanabe (J.Mol.Biol. 163, 467-484 (1983)) yielded a mean stoichiometry of 60 nucleotides per H5 molecule, independently of ionic strength, in the range of 3 to 300 mM NaCl, at very low DNA concentration (6 microM in mononucleotide). It ensues an approximate electroneutrality of the saturated complexes. Histone H5 molecules appeared to be clustered along the DNA lattice in clusters containing on average 3 to 4 H5 molecules separated by about 79 base pairs, at mid-saturation of the binding sites. The interaction process was found highly cooperative but the cooperativity parameter was also insensitive to ionic strength in the above range. DEFET experiments indicated an important decrease of accessibility of the FITC label to the TbHED3A and TbEDTA- chelates with ionic strength in the 0 to 100 mM NaCl range. In the presence of DNA, H5 appears already folded at low ionic strength so that the FITC probe is also not accessible to the donor chelate. The present study constitutes an indispensable preliminary step to further studies on the localization of histone H5 in condensed chromatin structures.  相似文献   

9.
We describe a chemical investigation of the nucleosome binding site(s) on histone H5. Selective radiolabelling by reductive methylation has led to the identification of lysine residues in H5 that are protected by its association with chromatin. The most strongly protected lysine is Lys-85 which occurs in the globular domain, in a region that is highly conserved between H5 and H1, and in H1 variants, and which probably constitutes a strong binding site for DNA where it enters and leaves the nucleosome. Lysines in the amino-terminal and lysine-rich carboxy-terminal tails are only weakly protected against chemical modification, suggesting a different mode of interaction with DNA.  相似文献   

10.
Eukaryotic chromosomal DNA is assembled into regularly spaced nucleosomes, which play a central role in gene regulation by determining accessibility of control regions. The nucleosome contains ∼147 bp of DNA wrapped ∼1.7 times around a central core histone octamer. The linker histone, H1, binds both to the nucleosome, sealing the DNA coils, and to the linker DNA between nucleosomes, directing chromatin folding. Micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digests the linker to yield the chromatosome, containing H1 and ∼160 bp, and then converts it to a core particle, containing ∼147 bp and no H1. Sequencing of nucleosomal DNA obtained after MNase digestion (MNase-seq) generates genome-wide nucleosome maps that are important for understanding gene regulation. We present an improved MNase-seq method involving simultaneous digestion with exonuclease III, which removes linker DNA. Remarkably, we discovered two novel intermediate particles containing 154 or 161 bp, corresponding to 7 bp protruding from one or both sides of the nucleosome core. These particles are detected in yeast lacking H1 and in H1-depleted mouse chromatin. They can be reconstituted in vitro using purified core histones and DNA. We propose that these ‘proto-chromatosomes’ are fundamental chromatin subunits, which include the H1 binding site and influence nucleosome spacing independently of H1.  相似文献   

11.
With the aim of discovering contribution of histone H1 to linking number changes of DNA, determination of linking number differences between histone H1-free circular polynucleosomes and histone H1-bound circular polynucleosomes was carried out during our investigations. Our results showed that on average, binding of ~11.5 histone H1 molecules causes one linking number change in circular polynucleosomes in the presence of 1.5?mM spermidine. When concentrations of spermidine decreases or increases, these linking number differences decrease significantly. It is therefore evident that linking number changes caused by histone H1 are spermidine concentration-dependent.  相似文献   

12.
Cooperative interaction of histone H1 with DNA.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The cooperative binding of histone H1 with DNA was studied using a fluorescently labelled histone H1. The titration data were analysed in terms of the large ligand model. The stoichiometric number, n = 65 +/- 10 bases/H1, was independent of NaCl concentration (0.02 - 0.35 M). The nucleation and the cooperative binding constants, K' and K, and the cooperativity parameter q were sensitive to salt concentration; K = 3.6 +/- 0.8 X 10(7) M-1 and q = 1.1 +/- 0.4 X 10(3) at 0.2 M NaCl. The dependence of K' on NaCl concentration revealed that 6 Na+ ions were released from DNA upon complex formation. An extrapolation of K' to 1M NaCl yielded a small value, K' = 5 +/- 2 M-1. Thus the binding of H1 is essentially electrostatic, being compatible with its independence of temperature. A calculation of K' based on the counterion release reproduced the salt concentration dependence of K'. Therefore, the binding of H1 is of an electrostatic territorial type. Thus, H1 may move along the DNA chain to a certain extent, when both salt concentration and the degree of saturation are sufficiently low. The condition is so restricted that the sliding would not play an important role in vivo. It was concluded from the DNA concentration independent binding isotherm that H1 can cooperatively bind onto a single DNA molecule. A simple power law dependence of the cooperativity parameter q upon NaCl concentration was found; q oc[NaCl]h with h = 0.72, though the physical basis of this dependence remains unknown.  相似文献   

13.
Trypsin digestion is used to investigate the conformation of histone H5 when bound to DNA. A central region of H5 comprising residues (22--100) is found to be resistant to digestion and it is concluded that this region is compacted whilst the remaining N- and C-terminal regions are more extended. Since this is the same result found previously for the free solution conformation of histone H5 it follows that a 3-domain structure is preserved on DNA binding. The binding of H5 and the central region (22--100) to DNA is also studied using proton magnetic resonance (270 MHz) and a precipitation approach. It is concluded that all 3 domains of H5 bind to DNA at low ionic strengths. The central domain (residues 22--100) is released at 0.3--0.4 M NaCl, but 0.7 M NaCl is required to release the N- and C-terminal regions. Comparison is made of H5 binding to DNA with that of the related histone H1.  相似文献   

14.
Treatment of chicken erythrocyte histone H5 with trypsin in a high-ionic-strength medium results in very rapid initial digestion and the formation of a 'limiting' resistant product peptide. Under these solution conditions the H5 molecule is maximally folded by spectroscopic criteria and it is concluded that the resistant peptide, GH5, represents a globular folded region of the molecule whilst the rapidly digested parts are disordered. The peptide GH5 is shown to comprise the sequence 22-100. In support of this conclusion it is shown that whilst intact histone H5 is hydrodynamically far from being a compact globular shape, peptide GH5 is approximately spherical by hydrodynamic and scattering criteria. Further more, peptide GH5 retains all the alpha-helical structure of intact H5 (circular dichroism) and appears to also maintain all the tertiary structure (nuclear magnetic resonance). It follows that in solution at high ionic strength, histone H5 consists of three domains: an N-terminal disordered region 1-21, a compact globular central domain 22-100 and a long disordered C-terminal chain 101-185. Structural parallels are drawn with the three-domain structure of the histone H1 molecule.  相似文献   

15.
Reconstitution of the 30 nm filament of chromatin from pure histone H5 and chromatin depleted of H1 and H5 has been studied using small-angle neutron-scattering. We find that depleted, or stripped, chromatin is saturated by H5 at the same stoichiometry as that of linker histone in native chromatin. The structure and condensation behavior of fully reconstituted chromatin is indistinguishable from that of native chromatin. Both native and reconstituted chromatin condense continuously as a function of salt concentration, to reach a limiting structure that has a mass per unit length of 6.4 nucleosomes per 11 nm. Stripped chromatin at all ionic strengths appears to be a 10 nm filament, or a random coil of nucleosomes. In contrast, both native and reconstituted chromatin have a quite different structure, showing that H5 imposes a spatial correlation between neighboring nucleosomes even at low ionic strength. Our data also suggest that five to seven contiguous nucleosomes must have H5 bound in order to be able to form a higher-order structure.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of thiol modification of histone H3 from chicken erythrocyte nuclei with the fluorogenic compound N-[p-(2-benzimidazolyl)phenyl]maleimide was determined at pH 5.5 and 2°C. Comparative experiments were performed with H3 in the natural mixture of the other histones (whole histone), assembled in the nucleosomal and in H2a/H2b depleted core particles. Exposure of the H3 thiols in core particles occurs within a rather narrow NaCl concentration range. The transition midpoint is shifted to lower ionic strength with decreasing core particle concentration and with increasing concentration of ethidium bromide added. The results presented permit the following conclusions about the disassembly process of core particles. Release of the H2a/H2b pairs at 0.5–0.7 m NaCl is not directly correlated with an exposure of H3 thiols. Exposure occurs at around 0.1 m NaCl and starts with a rather fast conformational transition of the depleted core followed by histone-DNA dissociation. Comparative experiments exploring the air mediated oxidation of thiols and the reactivity of lysine side chains with fluorescamine illustrate that the thiol exposure is a rather distinct event in core particle disassembly.  相似文献   

17.
Salt-dependent co-operative interaction of histone H1 with linear DNA   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
The nature of the complexes formed between histone H1 and linear double-stranded DNA is dependent on ionic strength and on the H1 : DNA ratio. At an input ratio of less than about 60% (w/w) H1 : DNA, there is a sharp transition from non-co-operative to co-operative binding at a critical salt concentration that depends on the DNA size and is in the range 20 to 50 mM-NaCl. Above this critical ionic strength the H1 binds to only some of the DNA molecules leaving the rest free, as shown by sedimentation analysis. The ionic strength range over which this change in behaviour occurs is also that over which chromatin folding is induced. Above the salt concentration required for co-operative binding of H1 to DNA, but not below it, H1 molecules are in close proximity as shown by the formation of H1 polymers upon chemical cross-linking. The change in binding mode is not driven by the folding of the globular domain of H1, since this is already folded at low salt in the presence of DNA, as indicated by its resistance to tryptic digestion. The H1-DNA complexes at low salt, where H1 is bound distributively to all DNA molecules, contain thickened regions about 6 nm across interspersed with free DNA, as shown by electron microscopy. The complexes formed at higher salt through co-operative interactions are rods of relatively uniform width (11 to 15 nm) whose length is about 1.6 times shorter than that of the input DNA, or are circular if the DNA is long enough. They contain approximately 70% (w/w) H1 : DNA and several DNA molecules. These thick complexes can also be formed at low salt (15 mM-NaCl) when the H1 : DNA input ratio is sufficiently high (approximately 70%).  相似文献   

18.
Specific interaction of histone H1 with eukaryotic DNA.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The interaction of calf thymus histone H1 with homologous and heterologous DNA has been studied at different ionic strengths. It has been found that about 0.5 M NaCl histone H1, and its fragments N-H1 (residues 1-72) and C-H1 (residues 73-C terminal), precipitate selectively a small fraction of calf thymus DNA. This selective precipitation is preserved up to very high values (less than 2.0) of the input histone H1/DNA ratio. The percentage of DNA insolubilized by histone H1 under these ionic conditions is dependent upon the molecular weight of the nucleic acid, diminishing from 18% fro a Mw equals 1.0 x 10(7) daltons to 5% for a Mw equals 8.0 x 10(4) daltons. The base composition of the precipitated DNA is similar to that of the bulk DNA. Calf thymus histone H1 also selectively precipitates a fraction of DNA from other eukaryotes (herring, trout), but not from some prokaryotes (E. coli, phage gamma. On the other hand, at 0.5 M NaCl, the whole calf thymus DNA (but not E. coli DNA) presents a limited number of binding sites for histone H1, the saturation ratio histone H1 bound/total DNA being similar to that found in chromatin. A similar behavior is observed from the histone H1 fragments, N-H1 and C-H1, which bind to DNA in complementary saturation ratios. It is suggested that in eukaryotic organisms histone H1 molecules maintain specific interactions with certain DNA sequences. A fraction of such specific complexes could act as nucleation points for the high-order levels of chromatin organization.  相似文献   

19.
The location of the globular domain of histone H5 relative to the axis of the 30 nm chromatin fiber was investigated by following the accessibility of this region of the molecule in chicken erythrocyte chromatin to specific antibodies as a function of chromatin structure. Antibodies to the globular domain of H5 as well as their Fab fragments were found to react with chromatin at ionic strengths ranging from 1-80 mM NaCl, the reaction gradually decreasing upon increase of salt concentration. If, however, Fab fragments were conjugated to ferritin, no reaction of the complex with chromatin was observed at salt concentrations higher than 20 mM. The accessibility of the globular part of H5 in unfolded chromatin to the Fab-ferritin complex was also demonstrated with trypsin-digested chromatin. The experiments were carried out by both solid-phase immunoassay and inhibition experiments. The data obtained are consistent with a structure in which the globular domain of H5 is internally located in the 30 nm chromatin fiber.  相似文献   

20.
The globular domain of the linker histone H5 has been expressed in Escherichia coli. The purified peptide is functional as it permits chromatosome protection during micrococcal nuclease digestion of chromatin reconstituted with the peptide, indicating that it binds correctly at the dyad axis of the nucleosomal core particle. The globular domain residue lysine 64 is highly conserved within the linker histone family, and site-directed mutagenesis has been used to assess the importance of this residue in the binding of the globular domain of linker histone H5 to the nucleosome. Recombinant peptides mutated at lysine 64 are unable to elicit chromatosome protection to the same degree as the wild-type peptide, and since they appear to be fully folded, these observations confirm a major role for this residue in determining the effective interaction between the globular domain of histone H5 and the nucleosome.  相似文献   

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