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10 m m

mircotubules. DNA. 10 m m. Eukaryotic cell nucleus. heterochromatin. euchromatin. nucleolus. Chromatin organization of higher eukaryotes. DNA. Chromatin in the nucleus. In 1884, Albrecht Kossel coined the term “histon” to describe the proteins he

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10 m m

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  1. mircotubules DNA 10 mm Eukaryotic cell nucleus heterochromatin euchromatin nucleolus

  2. Chromatin organization of higher eukaryotes DNA

  3. Chromatin in the nucleus • In 1884, Albrecht Kossel coined the term “histon” to describe the proteins he • found by extracting avian erythrocyte nuclei using diluted acids • In 1973, Olins et al and Woodcock et al observed that chromatin shows a • “beads on a string” structure by EM • treatment of chromatin with micrococcal nuclease preferentially cuts between the beads

  4. nucleosome H1 core histone octamer= 2 copies each of H2A H2B H3 H4 DNA Nucleosome structure • Roger Kornberg • based on EM images, nuclease digestion patterns, X-ray diffraction data, and purification • of nucleoprotein complexes, proposed that the nucleosome is the repeating unit of • chromatin and that every ~200 bp of DNA forms a complex with four histone pairs (1974)

  5. helicies Core histones • core histones (H2A, H2B, H3 and H4) are small (11 to 14 kD), highly basic proteins • they are evolutionarily highly conserved (from yeast to humans) • they all share similar structural motifs N C N-terminal tail C-term tail histone fold = “hand shake” motif

  6. Assembly of a nucleosome • histones can dimerize through their “hand shake motifs” • H3 can only dimerize with H4 and H2A always dimerizes with H2B • nucleosome assembly starts with two H3-H4 dimers forming a tetramer • this is followed by addition of two H2A-H2B dimers to form the octamer • DNA is wrapped around the histone octamer

  7. H3 H4 Nucleosome crystal structure Luger et al, Nature, 1997

  8. H3 H4 H2A H2B Nucleosome crystal structure Luger et al, Nature, 1997

  9. Why is chromatin folding important in the cell? DNA/chromatin has to condense and decondense during the cell cycle Stable cell line expressing H3-GFP

  10. How does chromatin folding affect nuclear functions? • nucleosomes inherently function as barrier to nuclear factors that need to • access and bind to DNA elements • e.g. chromatinized template inhibits transcription of underlying genes • also affects other DNA-templated processes such as DNA replication, • repair etc. • in order to activate gene expression, the cell has developed ways to “open” • up chromatin ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling factors histone modifying enzymes insert histone variants at strategic locations within genome

  11. ubiquitination Post translational modifications on histones • different modifications occur on specific residues to perform specific • regulatory functions

  12. Post translational modifications on histones • Histone PTM has been a "hot” research topic in the last 15 yrs Frequently asked questions: • What biological processes are associated with/regulated by site-specific • histone modifications? • What are the enzymes (acetylases, kinases, methyl-transferases) that • directly modify histones at specific sites? • What are the upstream pathways that regulated these enzymes? • What are the downstream effects of histone PTMs -- i.e. mechanism? • What are the enzymes that remove specific histone PTMs? • What pathways that regulate these de-acetylases, phosphatases, de-methylases etc?

  13. Histone acetylation regulates transcription activation • It has long been known that histones in vivo are acetylated, and as early as in • the 60’s, Vincent Allfrey has suggested that histone acetylation (and methylation) • regulate RNA synthesis • e.g. by the 70’s, Allfrey et al showed that drugs that increase histone acetylation • in cells also increased DNase sensitivity of the cellular DNA • by special labeling techniques, it was shown that more accessible chromatin • are enriched for acetylated histones • However, the direct link between histone acetylation and transcription regulation wasn’t • discovered till 1996 when the first transcription-associated histone acetyltransferase • (HAT) was identified

  14. - - + + Identification of the first histone acetyltransferase • The first transcription-associated histone acetyltransferase (HAT) was identified by an “in gel” histone acetyltransferase assay histone substrates SDS PAGE cut out for peptide sequencing, protein ID denature and renature proteins in the gel + 3H Ac-CoA Coomassie stain Autorad Brownell et al, Cell, 1996

  15. HATs hypo Ac-histone hyper Ac-histone HDACs transcription repression transcription activation Transcription is regulated by the balance of HATs and HDACs • The first HAT identified was Gcn5, which was a well-studied transcription • co-activator identified by genetics studies in yeast • Also in 1996, the first histone deacetylase (HDAC) was identified, and the enzyme • Rpd3 was also a long studied transcription repressor identified by yeast genetic • studies • Many other transcription co-activators and repressors were found to be HATs and • HDACs respectively, and these enzymes are recruited to promoters during • transcription activation or repression

  16. Technical advances that helped the study of histone modifications 1. Development and refinement of in vitro assays radioactive co-factor + + enzyme source substrate modified histones 3H-Ac-CoA (acetylation) nuclear extracts histones 3H-SAM (methylation) IP’d protein nucleosomes 32P-ATP (phosphorylation) recombinant protein peptides 32P-NAD (ADP-ribosylation)

  17. Example: identification of a histone H3 methyltransferase fractionate nuclear lysates by chromatography techniques collect fractions add histone H3 substrate and 3H SAM separate proteins by SDS PAGE stain gel or do autoradiography identify fractions that contain radio-actively labeled H3 repeat fractionation if necessary identify histone modifying enzyme Wang et al, Mol Cell, 2001

  18. ubiquitination How to identify site of histone modification?

  19. How to identify site of histone modification? histone methyl- transferase + + H3 peptide 3H-SAM radioactively-labeled peptide protein sequencing (Edman degradation) detect radioactive amino acid Strahl et al, PNAS, 1999

  20. Technical advances that helped the study of histone modifications Development and usage of histone modification-specific antibodies • antibodies are very useful reagents for research • they can have exquisite specificities and sensitivities for detection of proteins • can generate and purify antibodies that specifically detect site-specifically • modified histones

  21. Technical advances that helped the study of histone modifications Development and usage of histone modification-specific antibodies

  22. Recent article in BMC Bioinformatics on epigenetics and histone modifications

  23. Technical advances that helped the study of histone modifications Development and usage of histone modification-specific antibodies • antibodies are very useful reagents for research • they can have exquisite specificities and sensitivities for detection of proteins • can generate and purify antibodies that specifically detect site-specifically • modified histones • these antibodies can be used for Western blot analyses, immunofluorescence • (IF) studies, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays

  24. Uses of modification-specific histone antibodies 2a. Western blot analyses • modification-specific histone antibodies are useful for monitoring • overall abundance and global changes of specific histone modifications Briggs et al, Genes Dev, 2001

  25. Uses of modification-specific histone antibodies 2b. Immunofluorescence assays • modification-specific histone antibodies can be used to examine localization • of the modified histones within the nucleus Chromosome enriched in Lys9-methylated H3 Me(Lys9) H3

  26. Uses of modification-specific histone antibodies 2c. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assay • ChIP assay is useful for examining the enrichment of specific histone- • modifications or binding of specific factors to the gene of interest in vivo

  27. Uses of modification-specific histone antibodies 2c. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay • can be coupled to gene activation procedures to look at changes in histone- • modifications or transcription factor binding to specific genes before and after • transcription activation • can also be used in combination with microarray analyses (ChIP on chip) or deep- • DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) to do genome-wide mapping of histone modifications • and chromatin-binding proteins • while ChIP-chip or ChIP-seq provide correlational information, detailed ChIP • analyses of specific genes can help eludicate step-wise mechanisms

  28. Transcription activation of the b-interferon gene • The b-interferon gene is highly activated upon viral infections and has served as a • model system to study gene activations mRNA levels ChIP assays adapted from Agalioti et al, Cell, 2000

  29. How does histone acetylation promote transcription? • Acetylation neutralizes the positively charged lysine residues on histones and thus • reduces the interactions of the histones with the negatively charged DNA • Acetylated histones recruit and stabilize binding of transcription or chromatin • remodeling factors via interactions of the acetylated lysines with the • Bromodomains of these nuclear factors Jacobson et al; Science 2000

  30. Histone acetylation precedes recruitment of transcription factors ChIP assays mRNA levels adapted from Agalioti et al, Cell, 2000

  31. HATs Ac-histone histone HDACs kinases Phos-histone histone phosphatases Different dynamics of histone modifications highly dynamic HMT more stable Me-histone histone de-methylase

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