Identification and Analysis of Six Phosphorylation Sites Within the Xenopus laevis H1.0 C-Terminal Domain Indicate Distinct Effects on Nucleosome Structure

As a key structural component of the chromatin of higher eukaryotes, linker histones (H1s) are involved in stabilizing the folding of extended nucleosome arrays into higher-order chromatin structures and function as a gene-specific regulator of transcription in vivo. The H1 C-terminal domain (CTD) i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular & cellular proteomics 2022-05, p.100250, Article 100250
Hauptverfasser: Hao, Fanfan, Mishra, Laxmi, Jaya, Prasoon, Jones, Richard, Hayes, Jeffrey J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As a key structural component of the chromatin of higher eukaryotes, linker histones (H1s) are involved in stabilizing the folding of extended nucleosome arrays into higher-order chromatin structures and function as a gene-specific regulator of transcription in vivo. The H1 C-terminal domain (CTD) is essential for high-affinity binding of linker histones to chromatin and stabilization of higher-order chromatin structure. Importantly, the H1 CTD is an intrinsically disordered domain that undergoes a drastic condensation upon binding to nucleosomes. Moreover, although phosphorylation is a prevalent post-translational modification within the H1 CTD, exactly where this modification is installed and how phosphorylation influences the structure of the H1 CTD remains unclear for many H1s. Using novel mass spectrometry techniques, we identified six phosphorylation sites within the CTD of the archetypal linker histone Xenopus H1.0. We then analyzed nucleosome-dependent CTD condensation and H1-dependent linker DNA organization for H1.0 in which the phosphorylated serine residues were replaced by glutamic acid residues (phosphomimics) in six independent mutants. We find that phosphomimetics at residues S117E, S155E, S181E, S188E, and S192E resulted in a significant reduction in nucleosome-bound H1.0 CTD condensation compared with unphosphorylated H1.0, whereas S130E did not alter CTD structure. Furthermore, we found distinct effects among the phosphomimetics on H1-dependent linker DNA trajectory, indicating unique mechanisms by which this modification can influence H1 CTD condensation. These results bring to light a novel role for linker histone phosphorylation in directly altering the structure of nucleosome-bound H1 and a potential novel mechanism for its effects on chromatin structure and function. [Display omitted] •Identified 10 sites of phosphorylation within the archetypal linker histone Xenopus H1.0.•Six sites within the C-terminal domain via novel use of elastase as a protease.•Phosphorylation mimetics installed at each position indicate distinct effects on H1 C-terminal domain structure.•Effect of phosphorylation mimetics on H1 linker DNA reorganization is also diverse and suggests that phosphorylation nearest the globular domain (S117p) distinctly regulates linker DNA trajectory. Linker histones are key components of chromosomes and phosphorylated in association with mitosis and other nuclear processes. However, the location of phosphorylation within the h
ISSN:1535-9476
1535-9484
DOI:10.1016/j.mcpro.2022.100250