Artigo Revisado por pares

Histone-dependent reconstitution and nucleosomal localization of a nonhistone chromosomal protein: the H2A-specific protease

1982; American Chemical Society; Volume: 21; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/bi00531a008

ISSN

1943-295X

Autores

Dennis K. Watson, Evangelos N. Moudrianakis,

Tópico(s)

RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms

Resumo

We have described earlier a chromatin-bound protease with unique specificity for histone H2A [Eickbush, T. H., Watson, D. K., & Moudrianakis, E. N. (1976) Cell (Cambridge, Mass.) 9, 785--792]. In the present study, we explore the nature of interactions that form and stabilize the enzyme-chromatin system by using the activity of the protease to monitor its binding to DNA and DNA-histone complexes. During salt extraction of chromatin, the protease is released at an ionic strength between that required for the extraction of the slightly lysine-rich histones (H2A and H2B) and the arginine-rich histones (H3 and H4). The reassociation of this nonhistone protein to DNA has an absolute requirement for the H3--H4 tetramer and is only enhanced by the H2A--H2B dimer in the presence of the tetramer. We believe that the binding of the enzyme onto DNA requires some histone-elicited compaction of the helix. We have also examined the distribution of this enzyme within the chromatin fiber by isolating pools of monomer nucleosomes from micrococcal nuclease digests of 0.6 M NaCl extracted chromatin and from reconstituted DNA-protein complexes. The H2A-protease is found with these monomer nucleosome pools, and no activity can be detected in the low molecular weight products released during the digestion. Thus, by virtue of its extraction characteristics from chromatin and its association with isolated nucleosomes, this nonhistone protein exhibits properties hitherto assigned only to the inner histones.

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