High-Speed Atomic Force Microscopy Reveals the Nucleosome Sliding and DNA Unwrapping/Wrapping Dynamics of Tail-less Nucleosomes.
Shin MoriokaTakumi OishiSuguru HatazawaTakahiro KakutaTomoki OgoshiKenichi UmedaNoriyuki KoderaHitoshi KurumizakaMikihiro ShibataPublished in: Nano letters (2024)
Each nucleosome contains four types of histone proteins, each with a histone tail. These tails are essential for the epigenetic regulation of gene expression through post-translational modifications (PTMs). However, their influence on nucleosome dynamics at the single-molecule level remains undetermined. Here, we employed high-speed atomic force microscopy to visualize nucleosome dynamics in the absence of the N-terminal tail of each histone or all of the N-terminal tails. Loss of all tails stripped 6.7 base pairs of the nucleosome from the histone core, and the DNA entry-exit angle expanded by 18° from that of wild-type nucleosomes. Tail-less nucleosomes, particularly those without H2B and H3 tails, showed a 10-fold increase in dynamics, such as nucleosome sliding and DNA unwrapping/wrapping, within 0.3 s, emphasizing their role in histone-DNA interactions. Our findings illustrate that N-terminal histone tails stabilize the nucleosome structure, suggesting that histone tail PTMs modulate nucleosome dynamics.