Affiliation:
1. High Throughput Biology Center
2. Department of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry
3. Mass Spectrometry Facility, Department of Biological Chemistry
4. Middle Atlantic Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, Department of Pharmacology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The biological significance of recently described modifiable residues in the globular core of the bovine nucleosome remains elusive. We have mapped these modification sites onto the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
histones and used a genetic approach to probe their potential roles both in heterochromatic regions of the genome and in the DNA repair response. By mutating these residues to mimic their modified and unmodified states, we have generated a total of 39 alleles affecting 14 residues in histones H3 and H4. Remarkably, despite the apparent evolutionary pressure to conserve these near-invariant histone amino acid sequences, the vast majority of mutant alleles are viable. However, a subset of these variant proteins elicit an effect on transcriptional silencing both at the ribosomal DNA locus and at telomeres, suggesting that posttranslational modification(s) at these sites regulates formation and/or maintenance of heterochromatin. Furthermore, we provide direct mass spectrometry evidence for the existence of histone H3 K56 acetylation in yeast. We also show that substitutions at histone H4 K91, K59, S47, and R92 and histone H3 K56 and K115 lead to hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, linking the significance of the chemical identity of these modifiable residues to DNA metabolism. Finally, we allude to the possible molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of these modifications.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
212 articles.
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