Abstract

The N-terminus of Histone H3 is proteolytically processed in aged chicken liver. A histone H3 N-terminus specific endopeptidase (named H3ase) has been purified from the nuclear extract of aged chicken liver. By sequencing and a series of biochemical methods including the demonstration of H3ase activity in bacterially expressed GDH, it was established that the H3ase activity was a moonlighting protease activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). However, the active site for the H3ase in the GDH remains elusive. Here, using cross-linking studies of the homogenously purified H3ase, we show that the GDH and the H3ase remain in the same native state. Further, the H3ase and GDH activities could be uncoupled by partial denaturation of GDH, suggesting strong evidence for the involvement of different active sites for GDH and H3ase activities. Through densitometry of the H3ase clipped H3 products, the H3ase activity was quantified and it was compared with the GDH activity of the chicken liver nuclear GDH. Furthermore, the H3ase mostly remained distributed in the perinuclear area as demonstrated by MNase digestion and immuno-localization of H3ase in chicken liver nuclei, as well as cultured mouse hepatocyte cells, suggesting that H3ase demonstrated regulated access to the chromatin. The present study thus broadly compares the H3ase and GDH activities of the chicken liver GDH.

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