Abstract

We have used a combination of kinetic measurements and targeted mutations to show that the C-terminal domain is required for high-affinity binding of histone H1 to chromatin, and phosphorylations can disrupt binding by affecting the secondary structure of the C terminus. By measuring the fluorescence recovery after photo-bleaching profiles of green fluorescent protein-histone H1 proteins in living cells, we find that the deletion of the N terminus only modestly reduces binding affinity. Deletion of the C terminus, however, almost completely eliminates histone H1.1 binding. Specific mutations of the C-terminal domain identified Thr-152 and Ser-183 as novel regulatory switches that control the binding of histone H1.1 in vivo. It is remarkable that the single amino acid substitution of Thr-152 with glutamic acid was almost as effective as the truncation of the C terminus to amino acid 151 in destabilizing histone H1.1 binding in vivo. We found that modifications to the C terminus can affect histone H1 binding dramatically but have little or no influence on the charge distribution or the overall net charge of this domain. A comparison of individual point mutations and deletion mutants, when reviewed collectively, cannot be reconciled with simple charge-dependent mechanisms of C-terminal domain function of linker histones.

Highlights

  • We have used a combination of kinetic measurements and targeted mutations to show that the C-terminal domain is required for high-affinity binding of histone H1 to chromatin, and phosphorylations can disrupt binding by affecting the secondary structure of the C terminus

  • The C-terminal domain, which constitutes more than half of the total mass of the H1 protein, accounts for most of the sequence heterogeneity between histone H1 variants [18], and this domain was shown to be essential for high affinity in vivo binding to chromatin [29, 30]

  • Using green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged histone H1.1 and its mutated variants, we have defined the contribution of the amino- and carboxyl-terminal tail domains to the binding of histone H1.1 to chromatin in living cells

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Summary

Introduction

We have used a combination of kinetic measurements and targeted mutations to show that the C-terminal domain is required for high-affinity binding of histone H1 to chromatin, and phosphorylations can disrupt binding by affecting the secondary structure of the C terminus. We quantify the specific contributions of the N- and C-terminal domains of histone H1.1 as well as the T/SPXK motifs in the CTD to the in vivo chromatin binding affinity of histone H1.

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