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Download THE STRUCTURE OF CHROMATIN
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1 THE STRUCTURE OF CHROMATIN Textbook: Read the pages dealing with chromosome structure, histones, and nucleosomes. Chromosomes are composed of essentially equal masses of DNA and protein. This combination of DNA and protein was called chromatin by the early microscopists because it stained the same color (chromo) as the chromosomes with various stains. Chromatin is still a useful term, as long as we do not consider it to be just some amorphous substance. Chromatin is very structured. We cannot understand how the nucleus “works” unless we understand this structure. (When genes are active in a chromosome then of course transcription is occurring. Then the chromosome, and thus chromatin, will also be associated with RNA if we analyze its chemical composition.) The structure of the interphase chromosome (1) Each interphase chromosome contains one DNA double helix. (Unless it has passed through S-phase and then it has two double helices, joined at the centromere region. At this stage one can say that each chromatid has one DNA double helix.) (2) A large proportion of the protein in chromatin consists of the proteins called histones. There are 5 major histone molecules. (3) The histone molecules are basic (positively charged) proteins, which is why they associate so well with the negatively charged double helix. (4) It is the positively charged R-groups of lysine and arginine that are most responsible for making histone positively charged. Please know the structure of the amino acid lysine: (5) In the early 1970s, electron microscopists showed (with isolated and thinly “spread” chromatin) that the primary structure of a eukaryotic chromosome appeared as “beads on a string”. Treatment of the chromatin preparation with micrococcal DNAase (modern terminology is DNase) resulted in separated “beads” The DNA wrapped around the histones is protected from nuclease (DNase) attack so the “beads” (nucleosomes) remain intact. But the linker DNA gets cut up into its constituent deoxyribonucleotides. (6) The beads were given the term nucleosomes. (7) Analysis of the nucleosome showed them to be composed of: (a) 2 “turns” of DNA double helix around (b) 8 histone molecules. The 8 histones are said to from an octamer (oct = 8, mer = parts). (8) There were 2 molecules each of the following 4 types of histone molecule; 2A, 2B, 3, and 4. Note: There is a diagram on the effect of DNAase (point #5 above) on the very last page of this set of notes. 2 This is an electron micrograph of isolated chromatin from a human body (somatic cell), perhaps a liver cell. The chromatin has been spread extensively and then stained with lead (Pb++) acetate. Notice the very obvious “beads on a string”. What about the so-called “higher order” structure of the chromosomes? That is, how is the “beads on a string” structure further condensed, in an organized way, so the chromosomes can fit into an interphase nucleus? (1) The nucleosomes are “pulled together” by the addition of another type of histone molecule (histone 1), to the outer surface of the nucleosome, and various non-histone proteins to the “linker” region of the DNA. The latter is not shown in the diagram below. The “beads on a string” chromatin “fiber” is about 10 nm in diameter. HISTONE 1 LINKER REGION (2) This compacted “beads on a string” structure is now twisted to form a thicker “fiber” that is 30 nm in diameter. Hence this fiber is about 3X thicker than the plasma membrane (which has a diameter of about 10 nm). (3) This 30 nm diameter fiber is then folded (pleated) into loops when it is bound to various non-histone scaffold proteins. (4) Depending upon the exact condensation state of the heterochromatin there can be further “packing” events. (5) To form a mitotic chromosome another set of proteins called condensins is required. 3 It is interesting to note that the tightest packing of chromatin that occurs seems to be in the “head” of sperm cells. In this case nucleosomes are not used in the initial condensation of the DNA. After all, the 8 histone molecules of the nucleosome form quite a large “spool”! Instead, in the sperm nucleus the DNA helix is first condensed by the use of organic molecules called polyamines, specifically the polyamine called spermine DIFFERENTIATION SPERMATID – HAS HETEROCHROMATIN AND EUCHROMATIN; HAS NUCLEOSOMES Needless to say, the sperm chromatin is completely inactive! SPERM – HISTONES ARE REPLACED BY THE MUCH SMALLER POLYAMINES; DOES NOT HAVE NUCLEOSOMES 4 A closer look at nucleosomes and histones I have said that it is now clear that gene regulation in eukaryotes begins at the level of chromatin structure (less condensed euchromatin vs. more condensed heterochromatin) and location (genes in a transcription factory or not). Today a lot of work is being done on the chromatin remodelling that allows both changes in condensation and, presumably, changes in location of stretches of chromatin in the cell (e.g. inside or outside transcription or replication factories). To understand how chromatin remodelling occurs we need to look in more detail at the structure of nucleosomes. The important feature of this diagram is the presence of the histone tails that protrude from the nucleosome. There are 8 histone molecules in a nucleosome so there are 8 protruding tails. The artist has, unfortunately, shown only 4 histone molecules in the nucleosome but 8 histone tails. There are 4 other histone molecules completely hidden by the 4 you can see. Certain of the amino acids of the histone tails can be specifically modified by enzymes in the nucleus. A family of different histone methyltransferases can add up to 3 methyl groups to the Rgroups (in polypeptides these are also called “residues” or “side chains”) to the amino acid lysine. There are also DNA methyltransferases, which add methyl groups to cytosine in DNA, that are very important. But we are not going to consider the effects of DNA methylation. A family of different histone acetyltransferases (HATs) can add acetyl groups (essentially acetate) to lysine. Various histone kinases can add the terminal phosphate of ATP to the amino acid serine. A kinase is an enzyme that can add the terminal phosphate of ATP to a molecule. Kinases are named according to what molecule (or molecules) they can add the phosphate to. For example glucose kinase (or glucokinase) and histone kinase. The patterns of modification to the histone tails are very complex. But the significance of some of the histone tail modifications is already known. For example, acetylation of certain amino acids of the histone tails can cause chromatin to become less condensed, and thus more available to transcription or replication.. 5 But it actually depends upon which specific amino acids of the histone tails are being acetylated. And upon the tails of which of the 4 types of histone are being acetylated! And upon what is happening to other amino acids in the histone tails; are they being acetylated, methylated, or phosphorylated! So the histone tails are acting computer-like, summing up the total pattern of amino acid modification in the histone tails. The diagram below is not one to learn (!) but just to consider; This diagram shows the possible ways in which the amino acids in the tails of only one of the 4 types of histone molecule in the nucleosome can be modified. The other three types can be modified differently. Of course, the pattern of amino acid modification depends on the conditions, so think of how many possible permutations and combinations of modified amino acids there can be at a given time for just one nucleosome. This is why researchers talk about the histone code. The term histone code refer sto all possible permutations and combinations of modified amino acids there can be on the histone tails of nucleosomes and what each of these possibilities means in terms of nucleosome function. Most of the “meanings” of the histone code remain unknown. The very simplified simplified idea is shown below. 6 Methylation of histone usually turns a gene off. Acetylation of histone usually turns a gene on. Phosphorylation -- we're not sure what that does. Although, as stated above, it is not clear what effect the phosphorylation of serine in the histone has on their function, one can localize the areas in the nucleus where the tails of nucleosome histones are phosphorylated! This is because antibodies can be made that specifically bind to phophorylated histone compared to non-phosphorylated histone. The red denotes phosphorylated histone (using a fluorescent antibody against phosphorylated histone). The green denotes mitochondria (fluorescent antibody against cytochrome oxidase). Notice how phosphorylated histones are localized in specific areas of the nucleus. Certainly there are many nucleosomes, in the dark areas, that are not phosphorylated. When the various amino acids in the histone tails are modified it causes different proteins to bind to these modified regions. And then other proteins bind to these proteins as if in a “scrum”. It is the binding of these proteins that causes the changes in chromatin. Gene silencing and cell “memory” The cells of the very early embryo are said to be totipotent; that is they can differentiate into any of the cells required by the adult organism. After a certain number of divisions (mitoses), however, they lose this ability to so easily differentiate into all of the various cell types characteristic of the adult organism. Some cells, the stem cells, retain the ability to differentiate into cells of a certain related type e.g. blood cells or intestinal epithelial cells. Such cells are said to be pluripotent. Differentiation involves the turning off and on of sets of genes. Once a group of cells is destined to differentiate into related types of cells in the nervous system it makes sense to permanently turn off their ability to become intestinal epithelial cells. This is a cost saving in terms of regulatory effort and ensures that cells of the nervous system never accidentally turn into intestinal epithelial cells! This permanent gene silencing involves the modification of the histone tails, especially methylation and de-acetylation. This permanent, at least permanent in terms of the cells as they exit in the organism as opposed to those on a petri plate, involves chromatin condensation i.e. heterochromatin formation. The genes involved are said to have been silenced. It is interesting that daughter cells retain a “memory” of this silencing of the appropriate genes. An extreme case of this inheritable gene silencing is that of the inactivation of one of the Xchromosomes in mammalian females (to from the Barr body).Once one of the X-chromosomes in 7 a cell is inactivated, at about the 5000 cell stage in the the developing embryo, all the future cell generations of that cell have the same X-chromosome inactivated. This presumably results from the inheritance of methylated nucleosomes. When sister chromatids are made, in S-phase, not only does each chromatid receive one old strand of the initial DNA double helix (by the process of semi-conservative DNA replication) they also inherit half of the old histones! Reversibilty of histone tail modifications While I have emphasized in the above paragraph that some chromatin changes caused histone tail modification can be very stable, even from cell generation to cell generation, other changes are quite readily reversible. There are specific demethylases, deacetylases, and phosphatases that can reverse the effects of the methyltransferases, acetylases, and kinases, respectively. It is usual in cell control systems to have such antagonistic sets of enzmyes. Epigenetics It is clear from what we have seen that genes activity in eukaryotes is influenced by the structure of chromatin at a higher structural level than the direct effects on the gene promoters. We will discuss gene regulation at the promoter level before we finish talking about the nucleus two lectures from now. The effects of histone tail modification on gene activity that can be transmitted from one cell generation to the next, by mitosis or meiosis are said to be epigenetic (epi = above) effects. For example, when an X-chromosome is inactivated the copies of that chromosome remain inactivated (for transcription but not for replication!) in all future genartions of cells derived from the initial cell in which the X-chromosome was initially inactivated. This inactivation depends upon histone tail modification and not gene regulation at the promoter level. The same histone based inactivation of chromatin, but at a much less global level than in X-chromosome inactivation, seems to be involved in the cellular inheritance of various diseases. Key words: In additon to these notes on “The structure of chromatin” I will be giving out the structures of lysine, acetylated lysine, methylated lysine, and phosphorylated serine. I will want you to be able to draw these structures. histone histone methyltransferase histone acetyltransferase histone tail nucleosome linker region post-translational protein modfication micrococcal DNAase (or “nuclease”) histone 2A, 2B, 3, and 4 (the so-called “core histone”) histone 1 (the “compaction” histone) octamer anino acid residue (= R-group) condensins polyamine spermine spermatid sperm histone kinase kinase histone code chromatin re-modelling cell memory epigenetics X-chromosome inactivation Barr body S-phase semi-conservative replication of DNA chromatin 8 The DNA wrapped around “non-activated” nucleosomes is not susceptible to degradation by DNAases (“nucleases”). LOCATIONS OF ATTACK BY MICROCOCCAL NUCLEASE FREE DEOXYRIBONUCLEOTIDES FROM THE DIGESTION OF LINK DNA