4.6 Article

Sumoylated Human Histone H4 Prevents Chromatin Compaction by Inhibiting Long-range Internucleosomal Interactions

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 49, Pages 33827-33837

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.591644

Keywords

Chemical Modification; Chromatin Structure; Disulfide; Histone; Intein; Post-translational Modification (PTM); Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (SUMO); Sumoylation; Acetylation; Ligation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1S10RR027217]

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Background: Human histone H4 is post-translationally modified at Lys-12 by the small ubiquitin-like modifier protein (SUMO-3). Results: Chemical sumoylation at H4 Lys-12 revealed the inhibition of chromatin compaction and oligomerization by SUMO-3. Conclusion: Sumoylation changes chromatin structure by inhibiting long-range internucleosomal interactions and decreasing the affinity between adjacent nucleosomes. Significance: Learning how sumoylation changes the structure of chromatin suggests that it may mediate gene repression without chromatin compaction. The structure of eukaryotic chromatin directly influences gene function, and is regulated by chemical modifications of the core histone proteins. Modification of the human histone H4 N-terminal tail region by the small ubiquitin-like modifier protein, SUMO-3, is associated with transcription repression. However, the direct effect of sumoylation on chromatin structure and function remains unknown. Therefore, we employed a disulfide-directed strategy to generate H4 homogenously and site-specifically sumoylated at Lys-12 (suH4(ss)). Chromatin compaction and oligomerization assays with nucleosomal arrays containing suH4(ss) established that SUMO-3 inhibits array folding and higher order oligomerization, which underlie chromatin fiber formation. Moreover, the effect of sumoylation differed from that of acetylation, and could be recapitulated with the structurally similar protein ubiquitin. Mechanistic studies at the level of single nucleosomes revealed that, unlike acetylation, the effect of SUMO-3 arises from the attenuation of long-range internucleosomal interactions more than from the destabilization of a compacted dinucleosome state. Altogether, our results present the first insight on the direct structural effects of histone H4 sumoylation and reveal a novel mechanism by which SUMO-3 inhibits chromatin compaction.

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