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Histone H2A Ubiquitination Reinforces Mechanical Stability and Asymmetry at the Single-Nucleosome Level.

Xue XiaoCuifang LiuYingxin PeiYi-Zhou WangJingwei KongKe LuLu MaShuo-Xing DouPeng-Ye WangGuohong LiPing ChenWei Li
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
Monoubiquitination at lysine 119 of histone H2A (ubH2A) is a prevalent post-translational modification that is associated with gene repression in the context of chromatin. However, the direct function of ubH2A on nucleosome is poorly understood. Here we identified the effect of ubH2A on nucleosome using single-molecule magnetic tweezers. We revealed that ubH2A stabilizes the nucleosome by blocking the peeling of DNA from the histone octamer. Each ubH2A reinforces one-half of the outer wrap and introduces a robust asymmetry for nucleosome unfolding. Furthermore, a real-time deubiquitination process confirmed that ubH2A-nucleosome is sequentially deubiquitinated and restored to the unmodified nucleosome state. These results provide a novel mechanism to understand the repression of the passage of RNA or DNA polymerases through the ubH2A-nucleosome barrier during gene transcription or replication.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • copy number
  • dna damage
  • single cell
  • living cells
  • nucleic acid
  • amino acid
  • simultaneous determination
  • circulating tumor cells