Hyper(ADP-ribosyl)ation of histone H1

1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (12) ◽  
pp. 1085-1094 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Aubin ◽  
V. T. Dam ◽  
J. Miclette ◽  
Y. Brousseau ◽  
A. Huletsky ◽  
...  

Nucleosomal chains of various repeat unit lengths were generated by a mild micrococcal nuclease digestion of purified pancreatic nuclei. Maximal nucleosome associated poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity was recovered in trimeric to tetrameric chromatin fragments, after which the enzyme activity gradually decreased and stabilized towards oligomeric periodicities of 11 to 16 nucleosomes. Electrophoresis of [32P] ADP-ribosylated histones on first-dimension acid–urea or acid–urea–Triton gels and on second-dimension acid – urea – cetyltriammonium bromide gels revealed that, of all histones, only histone H1 could be significantly poly(ADP-ribosyl)ated while only minimal modification could be recovered with histone H10. Furthermore, the extent of ADP-ribosylation present on pancreatic histone H1 is shown to proportionally retard this protein's electrophoretic mobility in all gel systems and to consist of a distinct series of at least 12 modification intermediates which can be evidenced, in nuclei or nucleosomes, and fully recovered along with histone H1 upon its selective extraction with 5% perchloric acid. The generation of these increasingly ADP-ribosylated forms of histone H1 is also demonstrated to be time dependent and the more complex ADP-ribosylated forms of this histone are favored at high NAD+ concentrations. Moreover, the electrophoretic mobilities of all intermediates are unaffected by the presence of the nonionic detergent Triton X-100.

2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (24) ◽  
pp. 11156-11170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia P. Ulyanova ◽  
Gavin R. Schnitzler

ABSTRACT Human SWI/SNF (hSWI/SNF) is an evolutionarily conserved ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complex required for transcriptional regulation and cell cycle control. The regulatory functions of hSWI/SNF are correlated with its ability to create a stable, altered form of chromatin that constrains fewer negative supercoils than normal. Our current studies indicate that this change in supercoiling is due to the conversion of up to one-half of the nucleosomes on polynucleosomal arrays into asymmetric structures, termed “altosomes,” each composed of two histone octamers and bearing an asymmetrically located region of nuclease-accessible DNA. Altosomes can be formed on chromatin containing the abundant mammalian linker histone H1 and have a unique micrococcal nuclease digestion footprint that allows their position and abundance on any DNA sequence to be measured. Over time, altosomes spontaneously revert to structurally normal but improperly positioned nucleosomes, suggesting a novel mechanism for transcriptional attenuation as well as transcriptional memory following hSWI/SNF action.


1982 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-160
Author(s):  
K.L. Barnes ◽  
R.A. Craigie ◽  
P.A. Cattini ◽  
T. Cavalier-Smith

We have isolated a crude nuclear preparation from the unicellular red alga Porphyridium aerugineum and investigated the structure of Porphyridium chromatin. Electrophoresis of deproteinized DNA fragments produced by micrococcal nuclease digestion of Porphyridium nuclei gives a typical ladder pattern, indicative of a repeating structure. The DNA repeat-length, calculated from plots of multimer length against multimer number, varies somewhat between different digestions, ranging from 160 to 180 base-pairs (average 173). We interpret this as evidence of heterogeneity in repeat-length; the calculated repeat-length depends on the extent of digestion because chromatin sub-populations with longer repeat-lengths are on average digested earlier. Polyacrylamide/sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis of basic proteins purified from Porphyridium nuclear preparations gives a pattern characteristic of core histones. Although our interpretation is complicated by some degradation, the result strongly suggests that Porphyridium chromatin contains each of the four core histones and that they are similar to those of higher eukaryotes. This, together with the micrococcal nuclease digestion results, demonstrates that Porphyridium chromatin is not fundamentally different from that of higher eukaryotes.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (12) ◽  
pp. e15754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ho-Ryun Chung ◽  
Ilona Dunkel ◽  
Franziska Heise ◽  
Christian Linke ◽  
Sylvia Krobitsch ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 220 (2) ◽  
pp. 539-545 ◽  
Author(s):  
C C Liew ◽  
M J Halikowski ◽  
M S Zhao

[32P]Pi was administered to rats (5mCi/rat) 2h before the isolation of liver nuclei. The isolated nuclei were subjected to mild micrococcal-nuclease digestion for 2.5, 5 and 10 min at 37 degrees C, and the mononucleosomal fraction was subsequently isolated by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation. The specific radioactivity of 32P-labelled mononucleosomal fractions decreased with increased digestion times. A phosphorylated chromosomal protein, B2 (Mr 68000, pI6.5-8.2), was demonstrated immunologically in the mononucleosomal fraction by using an antibody specific to this electrophoretically purified phosphoprotein. The incorporation of 32P into this phosphoprotein, previously shown to be mainly through covalent linkage, was revealed by antibody precipitation followed by gel electrophoresis. The rate of release of acid-soluble nucleotides by micrococcal-nuclease digestion of liver nuclei from partially hepatectomized rats 16 h after operation was strikingly higher than that for sham-operated controls. After partial hepatectomy, an increase in 32P incorporation into phosphoprotein in the monomer fractions specifically precipitated by this antibody was also found. This suggests that the phosphorylated non-histone chromatin protein B2 is preferentially associated with the transcriptionally active chromatin.


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