Untargeted tail acetylation of histones in chromatin: lessons from yeastThis paper is one of a selection of papers published in this Special Issue, entitled CSBMCB’s 51st Annual Meeting – Epigenetics and Chromatin Dynamics, and has undergone the Journal’s usual peer review process.

2009 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Magnus N. Friis ◽  
Michael C. Schultz

Dynamic acetylation of lysine residues in the amino-terminal tails of the core histones is functionally important for the regulation of diverse DNA-dependent processes in the nucleus, including replication, transcription, and DNA repair. The targeted and untargeted activities of histone lysine acetylases (KATs) and deacetylases (HDACs) both contribute to the dynamics of chromatin acetylation. While the mechanisms and functional consequences of targeted on histone acetylation are well understood, relatively little is known about untargeted histone acetylation. Here, we review the current understanding of the mechanisms by which untargeted KAT and HDAC activities modulate the acetylation state of nucleosomal histones, focusing on results obtained for H3 and H4 in budding yeast. We also highlight unresolved problems in this area, including the question of how a particular steady-state level of untargeted acetylation is set in the absence of cis-dependent mechanisms that instruct the activity of KATs and HDACs.

2009 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer K. Choi ◽  
LeAnn J. Howe

Eukaryotic DNA is packaged into a nucleoprotein structure known as chromatin, which is comprised of DNA, histones, and nonhistone proteins. Chromatin structure is highly dynamic, and can shift from a transcriptionally inactive state to an active form in response to intra- and extracellular signals. A major factor in chromatin architecture is the covalent modification of histones through the addition of chemical moieties, such as acetyl, methyl, ubiquitin, and phosphate groups. The acetylation of the amino-terminal tails of histones is a process that is highly conserved in eukaryotes, and was one of the earliest histone modifications characterized. Since its identification in 1964, a large body of evidence has accumulated demonstrating that histone acetylation plays an important role in transcription. Despite our ever-growing understanding of the nuclear processes involved in nucleosome acetylation, however, the exact biochemical mechanisms underlying the downstream effects of histone acetylation have yet to be fully elucidated. To date, histone acetylation has been proposed to function in 2 nonmutually exclusive manners: by directly altering chromatin structure, and by acting as a molecular tag for the recruitment of chromatin-modifying complexes. Here, we discuss recent research focusing on these 2 potential roles of histone acetylation and clarify what we actually know about the function of this modification.


2003 ◽  
Vol 23 (24) ◽  
pp. 9136-9149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay Ramaswamy ◽  
Jessica S. Williams ◽  
Karen M. Robinson ◽  
Richelle L. Sopko ◽  
Michael C. Schultz

ABSTRACT Acetylation and phosphorylation of the amino-terminal tails of the core histones fluctuate on a global scale in concert with other major events in chromosome metabolism. A ubiquitin ligase, the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), controls events in chromosome metabolism such as sister chromatid cohesion and may regulate H3 phosphorylation by targeting Aurora A, one of several S10-directed H3 kinases in vertebrate cells, for destruction by the proteasome. Our analysis of apc10Δ and apc11ts loss-of-function mutants reveals that the APC controls the global level of H3 S10 phosphorylation in cycling yeast cells. Surprisingly, it also regulates dephosphorylation of H3 and global deacetylation of H2B, H3, and H4 during exit from the cell cycle into G0. Genetic, biochemical, and microarray analyses suggest that APC-dependent cell cycle control of H3 phosphorylation is exerted at the level of an Aurora H3 kinase, Ipl1p, while APC-dependent transcriptional induction of GLC7, an essential H3 phosphatase, contributes to sustained H3 dephosphorylation upon cell cycle withdrawal. Collectively, our results establish that core histone acetylation state and H3 phosphorylation are physiologically regulated by the APC and suggest a model in which global reconfiguration of H3 phosphorylation state involves APC-dependent control of both an H3 kinase and a conserved phosphatase.


2013 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 477-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gábor Mátis ◽  
Zsuzsanna Neogrády ◽  
György Csikó ◽  
Péter Gálfi ◽  
Hedvig Fébel ◽  
...  

The aim of the study was to investigate the in vivo epigenetic influences of dietary butyrate supplementation on the acetylation state of core histones and the activity of drug-metabolising microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes in the liver of broiler chickens in the starter period. One-day-old Ross 308 broilers were fed a starter diet without or with sodium butyrate (1.5 g/kg feed) for 21 days. After slaughtering, nucleus and microsome fractions were isolated from the exsanguinated liver by multi-step differential centrifugation. Histone acetylation level was detected from hepatocyte nuclei by Western blotting, while microsomal CYP activity was examined by specific enzyme assays. Hyperacetylation of hepatic histone H2A at lysine 5 was observed after butyrate supplementation, providing modifications in the epigenetic regulation of cell function. No significant changes could be found in the acetylation state of the other core histones at the acetylation sites examined. Furthermore, butyrate did not cause any changes in the drugmetabolising activity of hepatic microsomal CYP2H and CYP3A37 enzymes, which are mainly involved in the biotransformation of most xenobiotics in chicken. These data indicate that supplementation of the diet with butyrate probably does not have any pharmacokinetic interactions with simultaneously applied xenobiotics.


2002 ◽  
Vol 80 (3) ◽  
pp. 363-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakob H Waterborg

Histone acetylation, discovered more than 40 years ago, is a reversible modification of lysines within the amino-terminal domain of core histones. Amino-terminal histone domains contribute to the compaction of genes into repressed chromatin fibers. It is thought that their acetylation causes localized relaxation of chromatin as a necessary but not sufficient condition for processes that repackage DNA such as transcription, replication, repair, recombination, and sperm formation. While increased histone acetylation enhances gene transcription and loss of acetylation represses and silences genes, the function of the rapid continuous or repetitive acetylation and deacetylation reactions with half-lives of just a few minutes remains unknown. Thirty years of in vivo measurements of acetylation turnover and rates of change in histone modification levels have been reviewed to identify common chromatin characteristics measured by distinct protocols. It has now become possible to look across a wider spectrum of organisms than ever before and identify common features. The rapid turnover rates in transcriptionally active and competent chromatin are one such feature. While ubiquitously observed, we still do not know whether turnover itself is linked to chromatin transcription beyond its contribution to rapid changes towards hyper- or hypoacetylation of nucleosomes. However, recent experiments suggest that turnover may be linked directly to steps in gene transcription, interacting with nucleosome remodeling complexes.Key words: histone, acetylation, turnover, chromatin, transcription.


2006 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 518-527 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Calestagne-Morelli ◽  
Juan Ausió

Genomic characterization of various euchromatic regions in higher eukaryotes has revealed that domain-wide hyperacetylation (over several kb) occurs at a range of loci, including individual genes, gene family clusters, compound clusters, and more general clusters of unrelated genes. Patterns of long-range histone hyperacetylation are strictly conserved within each unique cellular system studied and they reflect biological variability in gene regulation. Domain-wide histone acetylation consists generally of nonuniform peaks of enriched hyperacetylation of specific core histones, histone isoforms, and (or) histone variants against a backdrop of nonspecific acetylation across the domain in question. Here we review the characteristics of long-range histone acetylation in some higher eukaryotes and draw special attention to recent literature on the multiple effects that histone hyperacetylation has on chromatin’s structural integrity and how they affect transcription. These include the thermal, ionic, cumulative, and isoform-specific (H4 K16) consequences of acetylation that result in a more dynamic core complex and chromatin fiber.


2000 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 804-816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuhiko Takahashi ◽  
Joseph B. Rayman ◽  
Brian David Dynlacht

The E2F transcription factor plays a pivotal role in the timely activation of gene expression during mammalian cell cycle progression, whereas pRB and related proteins control cell growth in part through the ability to block the action of E2F. To identify physiologically important E2F-responsive promoters and to study their occupancy and histone acetylation state in vivo, we have taken advantage of a cross-linking approach in synchronized, living cells. We find that the pattern of E2F and pRB-related polypeptides recruited to these promoters changes in a strikingly dynamic fashion as cells progress from quiescence into G1 and S phase: Repression of each promoter in quiescent cells is associated with recruitment of E2F-4 and p130 and low levels of histone acetylation, but by late G1, these proteins are replaced largely by E2F-1 and E2F-3, in concert with acetylation of histones H3 and H4 and gene activation. These findings suggest that repression and activation of E2F-responsive genes may occur through distinct E2F heterodimers that direct the sequential recruitment of enzymes able to deacetylate and then acetylate core histones.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. eabd4413
Author(s):  
Jung-Hoon Lee ◽  
Daniel Bollschweiler ◽  
Tillman Schäfer ◽  
Robert Huber

The chromatin-modifying histone deacetylases (HDACs) remove acetyl groups from acetyl-lysine residues in histone amino-terminal tails, thereby mediating transcriptional repression. Structural makeup and mechanisms by which multisubunit HDAC complexes recognize nucleosomes remain elusive. Our cryo–electron microscopy structures of the yeast class II HDAC ensembles show that the HDAC protomer comprises a triangle-shaped assembly of stoichiometry Hda12-Hda2-Hda3, in which the active sites of the Hda1 dimer are freely accessible. We also observe a tetramer of protomers, where the nucleosome binding modules are inaccessible. Structural analysis of the nucleosome-bound complexes indicates how positioning of Hda1 adjacent to histone H2B affords HDAC catalysis. Moreover, it reveals how an intricate network of multiple contacts between a dimer of protomers and the nucleosome creates a platform for expansion of the HDAC activities. Our study provides comprehensive insight into the structural plasticity of the HDAC complex and its functional mechanism of chromatin modification.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marianne B. Palczewski ◽  
Hannah Petraitis Kuschman ◽  
Rhea Bovee ◽  
Jason R. Hickok ◽  
Douglas D. Thomas

Abstract Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC) that produce nitric oxide (NO) are more aggressive, and the expression of the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase (NOS2) is a negative prognostic indicator. In these studies, we set out to investigate potential therapeutic strategies to counter the tumor-permissive properties of NO. We found that exposure to NO increased proliferation of TNBC cells and that treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor Vorinostat (SAHA) prevented this proliferation. When histone acetylation was measured in response to NO and/or SAHA, NO significantly decreased acetylation on histone 3 lysine 9 (H3K9ac) and SAHA increased H3K9ac. If NO and SAHA were sequentially administered to cells (in either order), an increase in acetylation was observed in all cases. Mechanistic studies suggest that the “deacetylase” activity of NO does not involve S-nitrosothiols or soluble guanylyl cyclase activation. The observed decrease in histone acetylation by NO required the interaction of NO with cellular iron pools and may be an overriding effect of NO-mediated increases in histone methylation at the same lysine residues. Our data revealed a novel pathway interaction of Vorinostat and provides new insight in therapeutic strategy for aggressive TNBCs.


1990 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 335-346
Author(s):  
B.M. Turner ◽  
L. Franchi ◽  
H. Wallace

The four histones of the nucleosome core particle are all subject to enzyme-catalysed, post-translational acetylation at defined lysine residues in their amino-terminal domains. Much circumstantial evidence suggests a role for this process in modifying chromatin structure and function, but detailed mechanisms have not been defined. To facilitate studies on the functional significance of histone acetylation, we have prepared antibodies specific for the acetylated isoforms of histone H4. Because of the extreme evolutionary conservation of H4, these antisera can be applied to a wide variety of organisms and experimental systems. In the present study we have used polytene chromosomes from the salivary glands of larvae of the midge Chironomus to examine the distribution of acetylated H4 in interphase chromatin. By indirect immunofluorescence, antisera to acetylated H4 labeled the four Chironomus chromosomes with reproducible patterns of sharply defined, fluorescent bands. An antiserum to non-acetylated H4 gave a completely different, more-diffuse labelling pattern. Thus, there are defined regions, or islands, in the interphase genome that are enriched in acetylated H4. Double-labelling experiments with two antisera specific for H4 molecules acetylated at different sites, showed that each antiserum gave the same banding pattern. Immunolabelling patterns were not dependent on the pattern of phase-dense bands characteristic of these chromosomes; strongly labelled regions could correspond to phase-dense bands (i.e. condensed chromatin), to interbands or, frequently, to band-interband junctions. Immunogold electron microscopy confirmed the immunofluorescence results and showed further that regions of relatively high labelling could be either transcriptionally active or quiescent, as judged by the presence or absence of ribonucleoprotein particles. Two rapidly transcribed genes on chromosome 4 of Chironomus form characteristic ‘puffs’, the Balbiani rings BRb and BRc. The antiserum to non-acetylated H4 gave diffuse labelling throughout these puffs, demonstrating the continued presence of this histone in these transcriptionally active regions. Antisera to acetylated H4 strongly labelled the boundaries of BRb and BRc, and revealed clearly defined islands of increased H4 acetylation just within the expanded chromatin of the puffs. Labelling within the central region of each puff was much less intense. A similar pattern was observed in puffs on other chromosomes. Thus, increased H4 acetylation is not found throughout actively transcribed chromatin but occurs only at defined sites, possibly in the non-transcribed flanking regions. H4 acetylation is clearly not required for the passage of RNA polymerase through the nucleosome and we speculate that its role may be to facilitate the binding to DNA of polymerases and other proteins prior to the onset of transcription and possibly replication.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (16) ◽  
pp. 7583-7591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia L. Gonzalez ◽  
Matt Stremlau ◽  
Xi He ◽  
John R. Basile ◽  
Karl Münger

ABSTRACT The steady-state level and metabolic half-life of retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein pRB are decreased in cells that express high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) E7 proteins. Here we show that pRB degradation is a direct activity of E7 and does not reflect a property of cell lines acquired during the selection process for E7 expression. An amino-terminal domain of E7 that does not directly contribute to pRB binding but is required for transformation is also necessary for E7-mediated pRB degradation. Treatment with inhibitors of the 26S proteasome not only blocks E7-mediated pRB degradation but also causes the stabilization of E7. Mutagenic analyses, however, reveal that the processes of proteasomal degradation of E7 and pRB are not linked processes. HPV type 16 E7 also targets the pRB-related proteins p107 and p130 for destabilization by a proteasome-dependent mechanism. Using the SAOS2 flat-cell assay as a biological indicator for pRB function, we demonstrate that pRB degradation, not solely binding, is important for the E7-induced inactivation of pRB.


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