Crystal structure of the overlapping dinucleosome composed of hexasome and octasome.
Daiki KatoAkihisa OsakabeYasuhiro ArimuraYuka MizukamiNaoki HorikoshiKazumi SaikusaSatoko AkashiYoshifumi NishimuraSam-Yong ParkJumpei NogamiKazumitsu MaeharaYasuyuki OhkawaAtsushi MatsumotoHidetoshi KonoRintaro InoueMasaaki SugiyamaHitoshi KurumizakaPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2017)
Nucleosomes are dynamic entities that are repositioned along DNA by chromatin remodeling processes. A nucleosome repositioned by the switch-sucrose nonfermentable (SWI/SNF) remodeler collides with a neighbor and forms the intermediate "overlapping dinucleosome." Here, we report the crystal structure of the overlapping dinucleosome, in which two nucleosomes are associated, at 3.14-angstrom resolution. In the overlapping dinucleosome structure, the unusual "hexasome" nucleosome, composed of the histone hexamer lacking one H2A-H2B dimer from the conventional histone octamer, contacts the canonical "octasome" nucleosome, and they intimately associate. Consequently, about 250 base pairs of DNA are left-handedly wrapped in three turns, without a linker DNA segment between the hexasome and octasome moieties. The overlapping dinucleosome structure may provide important information to understand how nucleosome repositioning occurs during the chromatin remodeling process.