The role of cryptic ancestral symmetry in histone folding mechanisms across Eukarya and Archaea

Author:

Zhao HaiqingORCID,Wu Hao,Guseman Alex,Abeykoon Dulith,Camara Christina M.,Dalal YaminiORCID,Fushman David,Papoian Garegin A.

Abstract

Histones compact and store DNA in both Eukarya and Archaea, forming heterodimers in Eukarya and homodimers in Archaea. Despite this, the folding mechanism of histones across species remains unclear. Our study addresses this gap by investigating 11 types of histone and histone-like proteins across humans, Drosophila, and Archaea through multiscale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, complemented by NMR and circular dichroism experiments. We confirm and elaborate on the widely applied “folding upon binding” mechanism of histone dimeric proteins and report a new alternative conformation, namely, the inverted non-native dimer, which may be a thermodynamically metastable configuration. Protein sequence analysis indicated that the inverted conformation arises from the hidden ancestral head-tail sequence symmetry underlying all histone proteins, which is congruent with the previously proposed histone evolution hypotheses. Finally, to explore the potential formations of homodimers in Eukarya, we utilized MD-based AWSEM and AI-based AlphaFold-Multimer models to predict their structures and conducted extensive all-atom MD simulations to examine their respective structural stabilities. Our results suggest that eukaryotic histones may also form stable homodimers, whereas their disordered tails bring significant structural asymmetry and tip the balance towards the formation of commonly observed heterotypic dimers.

Funder

NCI-UMD partnership program for Integrative Cancer Research

Ann G. Wylie Dissertation Fellowship

Amazon Web Services Artificial Intelligence Award

NIH Intramural Research Program

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Histones and histone variant families in prokaryotes;Nature Communications;2024-09-11

2. Nucleosomes at the Dawn of Eukaryotes;Genome Biology and Evolution;2024-02-14

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