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Epigenetic modulation via the C-terminal tail of H2A.Z.

Authors :
Imre, László
Nánási Jr, Péter
Benhamza, Ibtissem
Enyedi, Kata Nóra
Mocsár, Gábor
Bosire, Rosevalentine
Hegedüs, Éva
Niaki, Erfaneh Firouzi
Csóti, Ágota
Darula, Zsuzsanna
Csősz, Éva
Póliska, Szilárd
Scholtz, Beáta
Mező, Gábor
Bacsó, Zsolt
Timmers, H. T. Marc
Kusakabe, Masayuki
Balázs, Margit
Vámosi, György
Ausio, Juan
Source :
Nature Communications; 10/24/2024, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p1-21, 21p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

H2A.Z-nucleosomes are present in both euchromatin and heterochromatin and it has proven difficult to interpret their disparate roles in the context of their stability features. Using an in situ assay of nucleosome stability and DT40 cells expressing engineered forms of the histone variant we show that native H2A.Z, but not C-terminally truncated H2A.Z (H2A.Z∆C), is released from nucleosomes of peripheral heterochromatin at unusually high salt concentrations. H2A.Z and H3K9me3 landscapes are reorganized in H2A.Z∆C-nuclei and overall sensitivity of chromatin to nucleases is increased. These tail-dependent differences are recapitulated upon treatment of HeLa nuclei with the H2A.Z-tail-peptide (C9), with MNase sensitivity being increased genome-wide. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy revealed C9 binding to reconstituted nucleosomes. When introduced into live cells, C9 elicited chromatin reorganization, overall nucleosome destabilization and changes in gene expression. Thus, H2A.Z-nucleosomes influence global chromatin architecture in a tail-dependent manner, what can be modulated by introducing the tail-peptide into live cells. Here the authors reveal triple heterogeneity of H2A.Z containing nucleosomes, attributed to interactions involving the C-terminal tail of the histone variant, and demonstrate modulation of global chromatin architecture using a synthetic tail peptide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180501645
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53514-9