Abstrakt: |
The nucleosome is the fundamental gene-packing unit in eukaryotes. Nucleosomes comprise ∼147 bp DNA wrapped around an octameric histone protein core composed of two H2A-H2B dimers and one (H3-H4) 2 tetramer. The strong yet flexible DNA-histone interactions are a physical basis of the dynamic regulation of genes packaged in chromatin. The dynamic nature of DNA-histone interactions implies that nucleosomes dissociate DNA-histone contacts transiently and repeatedly. This kinetic instability may lead to spontaneous nucleosome disassembly or histone exchange between nucleosomes. At a high nucleosome concentration, nucleosome-nucleosome collisions and subsequent histone exchange would be a more likely pathway, where nucleosomes act as their own histone chaperone. The spontaneous histone exchange would serve as a mechanism for maintaining the overall chromatin stability although it has never been reported. We employed three-color single-molecule FRET (smFRET) to demonstrate that histone H2A-H2B dimers are exchanged spontaneously between nucleosomes and that the time scale is on a few tens of seconds at a physiological nucleosome concentration. The rate of histone exchange increases at a higher monovalent salt concentration, with histone acetylated nucleosomes, and in the presence of histone chaperone Nap1, while it remains unchanged at a higher temperature, and decreases upon DNA methylation. These results support histone exchange via transient and repetitive partial disassembly of the nucleosome and corroborate spontaneous histone diffusion in a compact chromatin context, modulating the local concentrations of histone modifications and variants. |