4.8 Article

Dynamics of the nucleosomal histone H3 N-terminal tail revealed by high precision single-molecule FRET

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 48, Issue 3, Pages 1551-1571

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkz1186

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German-Israeli Helmholtz Graduate School for Cancer Research
  2. Heidelberg Biosciences International Graduate School
  3. DFG [La 500/18-1, Se 1195/15-1, Le 3910/2-1]
  4. European Research Council [671208]
  5. H2020 European Research Council [671208]
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [671208] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Chromatin compaction and gene accessibility are orchestrated by assembly and disassembly of nucleosomes. Although the disassembly process was widely studied, little is known about the structure and dynamics of the disordered histone tails, which play a pivotal role for nucleosome integrity. This is a gap filling experimental FRET study from the perspective of the histone H3 N-terminal tail (H3NtT) of reconstituted mononucleosomes. By systematic variation of the labeling positions we monitored the motions of the H3NtT relative to the dyad axis and linker DNA. Single-molecule FRET unveiled that H3NtTs do not diffuse freely but follow the DNA motions with multiple interaction modes with certain permitted dynamic transitions in the mu s to ms time range. We also demonstrate that the H3NtT can allosterically sense charge-modifying mutations within the histone core (helix alpha 3 of histone H2A (R81E/R88E)) resulting in increased dynamic transitions and lower rate constants. Those results complement our earlier model on the NaCl induced nucleosome disassembly as changes in H3NtT configurations coincide with two major steps: unwrapping of one linker DNA and weakening of the internal DNA - histone interactions on the other side. This emphasizes the contribution of the H3NtT to the fine-tuned equilibrium between overall nucleosome stability and DNA accessibility.

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