Affiliation:
1. Medical Research Council London Institute of Medical Sciences, London, UK
2. Institute of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK
Abstract
Histones are the principal constituents of eukaryotic chromatin. The four core histones (H2A, H2B, H3 and H4) are conserved across sequenced eukaryotic genomes and therefore thought to be universal to eukaryotes. In the early 1980s, however, a series of biochemical investigations failed to find evidence for histones or nucleosomal structures in the microscopic green alga
Nanochlorum eucaryotum
. If true, derived histone loss in this lineage would constitute an exceptional case that might help us further understand the principles governing eukaryotic gene regulation. To substantiate these earlier reports of histone loss in
N. eucaryotum,
we sequenced, assembled and quantified its transcriptome. Following a systematic search for histone-fold domains in the assembled transcriptome, we detect orthologues to all four core histones. We also find histone mRNAs to be highly expressed, comparable to the situation in other eukaryotes. Finally, we obtain characteristic protection patterns when
N. eucaryotum
chromatin is subjected to micrococcal nuclease digestion, indicating widespread formation of nucleosomal complexes
in vivo
. We conclude that previous reports of missing histones in
N. eucaryotum
were mistaken. By all indications,
Nanochlorum eucaryotum
has histone-based chromatin characteristic of most eukaryotes.
Cited by
6 articles.
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