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Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin

BACKGROUND: Histone H1 is involved in the formation and maintenance of chromatin higher order structure. H1 has multiple isoforms; the subtypes differ in timing of expression, extent of phosphorylation and turnover rate. In vertebrates, the amino acid substitution rates differ among subtypes by almo...

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Autores principales: Orrego, Mary, Ponte, Imma, Roque, Alicia, Buschati, Natascha, Mora, Xavier, Suau, Pedro
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1890542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17498293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-5-22
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author Orrego, Mary
Ponte, Imma
Roque, Alicia
Buschati, Natascha
Mora, Xavier
Suau, Pedro
author_facet Orrego, Mary
Ponte, Imma
Roque, Alicia
Buschati, Natascha
Mora, Xavier
Suau, Pedro
author_sort Orrego, Mary
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Histone H1 is involved in the formation and maintenance of chromatin higher order structure. H1 has multiple isoforms; the subtypes differ in timing of expression, extent of phosphorylation and turnover rate. In vertebrates, the amino acid substitution rates differ among subtypes by almost one order of magnitude, suggesting that each subtype might have acquired a unique function. We have devised a competitive assay to estimate the relative binding affinities of histone H1 mammalian somatic subtypes H1a-e and H1° for long chromatin fragments (30–35 nucleosomes) in physiological salt (0.14 M NaCl) at constant stoichiometry. RESULTS: The H1 complement of native chromatin was perturbed by adding an additional amount of one of the subtypes. A certain amount of SAR (scaffold-associated region) DNA was present in the mixture to avoid precipitation of chromatin by excess H1. SAR DNA also provided a set of reference relative affinities, which were needed to estimate the relative affinities of the subtypes for chromatin from the distribution of the subtypes between the SAR and the chromatin. The amounts of chromatin, SAR and additional H1 were adjusted so as to keep the stoichiometry of perturbed chromatin similar to that of native chromatin. H1 molecules freely exchanged between the chromatin and SAR binding sites. In conditions of free exchange, H1a was the subtype of lowest affinity, H1b and H1c had intermediate affinities and H1d, H1e and H1° the highest affinities. Subtype affinities for chromatin differed by up to 19-fold. The relative affinities of the subtypes for chromatin were equivalent to those estimated for a SAR DNA fragment and a pUC19 fragment of similar length. Avian H5 had an affinity ~12-fold higher than H1e for both DNA and chromatin. CONCLUSION: H1 subtypes freely exchange in vitro between chromatin binding sites in physiological salt (0.14 M NaCl). The large differences in relative affinity of the H1 subtypes for chromatin suggest that differential affinity could be functionally relevant and thus contribute to the functional differentiation of the subtypes. The conservation of the relative affinities for SAR and non-SAR DNA, in spite of a strong preference for SAR sequences, indicates that differential affinity alone cannot be responsible for the heterogeneous distribution of some subtypes in cell nuclei.
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spelling pubmed-18905422007-06-11 Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin Orrego, Mary Ponte, Imma Roque, Alicia Buschati, Natascha Mora, Xavier Suau, Pedro BMC Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Histone H1 is involved in the formation and maintenance of chromatin higher order structure. H1 has multiple isoforms; the subtypes differ in timing of expression, extent of phosphorylation and turnover rate. In vertebrates, the amino acid substitution rates differ among subtypes by almost one order of magnitude, suggesting that each subtype might have acquired a unique function. We have devised a competitive assay to estimate the relative binding affinities of histone H1 mammalian somatic subtypes H1a-e and H1° for long chromatin fragments (30–35 nucleosomes) in physiological salt (0.14 M NaCl) at constant stoichiometry. RESULTS: The H1 complement of native chromatin was perturbed by adding an additional amount of one of the subtypes. A certain amount of SAR (scaffold-associated region) DNA was present in the mixture to avoid precipitation of chromatin by excess H1. SAR DNA also provided a set of reference relative affinities, which were needed to estimate the relative affinities of the subtypes for chromatin from the distribution of the subtypes between the SAR and the chromatin. The amounts of chromatin, SAR and additional H1 were adjusted so as to keep the stoichiometry of perturbed chromatin similar to that of native chromatin. H1 molecules freely exchanged between the chromatin and SAR binding sites. In conditions of free exchange, H1a was the subtype of lowest affinity, H1b and H1c had intermediate affinities and H1d, H1e and H1° the highest affinities. Subtype affinities for chromatin differed by up to 19-fold. The relative affinities of the subtypes for chromatin were equivalent to those estimated for a SAR DNA fragment and a pUC19 fragment of similar length. Avian H5 had an affinity ~12-fold higher than H1e for both DNA and chromatin. CONCLUSION: H1 subtypes freely exchange in vitro between chromatin binding sites in physiological salt (0.14 M NaCl). The large differences in relative affinity of the H1 subtypes for chromatin suggest that differential affinity could be functionally relevant and thus contribute to the functional differentiation of the subtypes. The conservation of the relative affinities for SAR and non-SAR DNA, in spite of a strong preference for SAR sequences, indicates that differential affinity alone cannot be responsible for the heterogeneous distribution of some subtypes in cell nuclei. BioMed Central 2007-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC1890542/ /pubmed/17498293 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-5-22 Text en Copyright © 2007 Orrego et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Orrego, Mary
Ponte, Imma
Roque, Alicia
Buschati, Natascha
Mora, Xavier
Suau, Pedro
Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title_full Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title_fullStr Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title_full_unstemmed Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title_short Differential affinity of mammalian histone H1 somatic subtypes for DNA and chromatin
title_sort differential affinity of mammalian histone h1 somatic subtypes for dna and chromatin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1890542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17498293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-5-22
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