posted on 2015-12-03, 00:00authored byJongseong Kim, Jaehyoun Lee, Tae-Hee Lee
The nucleosome, comprising a histone
protein core wrapped around by DNA, is the fundamental packing unit
of DNA in cells. Lysine acetylation at the histone core elevates DNA
accessibility in the nucleosome, the mechanism of which remains largely
unknown. By employing our recently developed hybrid single molecule
approach, here we report how the structural dynamics of DNA in the
nucleosome is altered upon acetylation at histone H3 lysine 56 (H3K56)
that is critical for elevated DNA accessibility. Our results indicate
that H3K56 acetylation facilitates the structural dynamics of the
DNA at the nucleosome termini that spontaneously and repeatedly open
and close on a ms time scale. The results support a molecular mechanism
of histone acetylation in catalyzing DNA unpacking whose efficiency
is ultimately limited by the spontaneous DNA dynamics at the nucleosome
temini. This study provides the first and unique experimental evidence
revealing a role of protein chemical modification in directly regulating
the kinetic stability of the DNA packing unit.