Abstract

We report a novel platform [native capillary zone electrophoresis-top-down mass spectrometry (nCZE-TDMS)] for the separation and characterization of whole nucleosomes, their histone subunits, and post-translational modifications (PTMs). As the repeating unit of chromatin, mononucleosomes (Nucs) are an ∼200 kDa complex of DNA and histone proteins involved in the regulation of key cellular processes central to human health and disease. Unraveling the covalent modification landscape of histones and their defined stoichiometries within Nucs helps to explain epigenetic regulatory mechanisms. In nCZE-TDMS, online Nuc separation is followed by a three-tier tandem MS approach that measures the intact mass of Nucs, ejects and detects the constituent histones, and fragments to sequence the histone. The new platform was optimized with synthetic Nucs to significantly reduce both sample requirements and cost compared to direct infusion. Limits of detection were in the low-attomole range, with linearity of over ∼3 orders of magnitude. The nCZE-TDMS platform was applied to endogenous Nucs from two cell lines distinguished by overexpression or knockout of histone methyltransferase NSD2/MMSET, where analysis of constituent histones revealed changes in histone abundances over the course of the CZE separation. We are confident the nCZE-TDMS platform will help advance nucleosome-level research in the fields of chromatin and epigenetics.

Highlights

  • Increasing evidence indicates that disruption in the cellular epigenetic machinery may be a key initiator in several types of cancer and other disorders.[1]

  • We first evaluated the performance of the nCZE-topdown mass spectrometry (TDMS) platform with a recombinant Nuc containing the histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 27 (H3K27me[3], c = 1 μM, Figure 1a-c)

  • The data show that both salts and other buffer components are clearly separated from the Nuc signal in the total ion electropherogram (TIE, Figure 1b), obviating the need for additional sample purification such as solvent exchange to ammonium acetate (AmAc) solutions.[42]

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing evidence indicates that disruption in the cellular epigenetic machinery may be a key initiator in several types of cancer and other disorders.[1]. Unraveling the full landscape of modifications on whole Nucs is key to elucidate the mechanisms that exert epigenetic control over a genomic location

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