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Emergence of chromatin hierarchical loops from protein disorder and nucleosome asymmetry

Área de investigaciónQuímica y Ciencia y Tecnología de los Materiales
TítuloEmergence of chromatin hierarchical loops from protein disorder and nucleosome asymmetry
Tipo de publicaciónArtículo de revista
Año de publicación2020
AutoresSridhar, A, Farr, SE, Portella, G, Schlick, T, Orozco, M, Collepardo-Guevara, R
RevistaPROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Volumen117
Número13
Páginas7216-7224
Type of ArticleArticle
Palabras claveschromatin polymorphism, CTD of H1, H1-nucleosome binding, nucleosome asymmetry, protein disorder
Abstract

Protein flexibility and disorder is emerging as a crucial modulator of chromatin structure. Histone tail disorder enables transient binding of different molecules to the nucleosomes, thereby promoting heterogeneous and dynamic internucleosome interactions and making possile recruitment of a wide-range of regulatory and remodeling proteins. On the basis of extensive multiscale modeling we reveal the importance of linker histone H1 protein disorder for chromatin hierarchical looping. Our multiscale approach bridges microsecond-long bias-exchange metadynamics molecular dynamics simulations of atomistic 211-bp nucleosomes with coarse-grained Monte Carlo simulations of 100-nucleosome systems. We show that the long C-terminal domain (CTD) of H1-a ubiquitous nucleosome-binding protein-remains disordered when bound to the nucleosome. Notably, such CTD disorder leads to an asymmetric and dynamical nucleosome conformation that promotes chromatin structural flexibility and establishes long-range hierarchical loops. Furthermore, the degree of condensation and flexibility of H1 can be fine-tuned, explaining chromosomal differences of interphase versus metaphase states that correspond to partial and hyperphosphorylated H1, respectively. This important role of H1 protein disorder in large-scale chromatin organization has a wide range of biological implications.

DOI10.1073/pnas.1910044117