H2A.Z.2.2 is an alternatively spliced histone H2A.Z variant that causes severe nucleosome destabilization

Clemens Bönisch(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Katrin Schneider(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Sebastian Pünzeler(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Sonja M. Wiedemann(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Christina Bielmeier(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Marco Bocola(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), H. Christian Eberl(Max Planck Society), Wolfgang Kuegel(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Jürgen Neumann(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Elisabeth Kremmer(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Heinrich Leonhardt(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Matthias Mann(Max Planck Society), Jens Michaelis(Max Planck Society), Lothar Schermelleh(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Sandra B. Hake(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich)
Nucleic Acids Research
March 29, 2012
Cited by 108Open Access
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Abstract

The histone variant H2A.Z has been implicated in many biological processes, such as gene regulation and genome stability. Here, we present the identification of H2A.Z.2.2 (Z.2.2), a novel alternatively spliced variant of histone H2A.Z and provide a comprehensive characterization of its expression and chromatin incorporation properties. Z.2.2 mRNA is found in all human cell lines and tissues with highest levels in brain. We show the proper splicing and in vivo existence of this variant protein in humans. Furthermore, we demonstrate the binding of Z.2.2 to H2A.Z-specific TIP60 and SRCAP chaperone complexes and its active replication-independent deposition into chromatin. Strikingly, various independent in vivo and in vitro analyses, such as biochemical fractionation, comparative FRAP studies of GFP-tagged H2A variants, size exclusion chromatography and single molecule FRET, in combination with in silico molecular dynamics simulations, consistently demonstrate that Z.2.2 causes major structural changes and significantly destabilizes nucleosomes. Analyses of deletion mutants and chimeric proteins pinpoint this property to its unique C-terminus. Our findings enrich the list of known human variants by an unusual protein belonging to the H2A.Z family that leads to the least stable nucleosome known to date.


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