Utilisateur
DNA wrapped around a histone octamer
2 copies each of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4
Linker DNA
To compact DNA so it fits inside the nucleus
Histones are mostly positively charged and DNA is negatively charged
They can block promoters as a form of gene regulation
If a promoter is wrapped too closely around a nucleosome, transcription machinery cannot access it well
Alternative histone proteins that can replace regular histones in some nucleosomes
MacroH2A
CENP-A, also called CenH3 in some lectures
Small organic groups covalently and reversibly added to amino tails (8)- temporaily modified
Lysine, arginine, and serine
Acetylation- lysine, methylation- arginine, and phosphorylation- serine
Histone H3, Arginine 17, methylated
Histone H3, lysine 4, methylated
Histone H3, serine 10, phosphorylated
Enzymes that add histone modifications
Enzymes that remove histone modifications
HATs (histone acetyltransferases) add acetyl groups and HDACs (histone deacetylases) remove them
Histone variants and histone modifications directly alter the affinity between DNA and the histone octamer, changing chromatin accessibility
Histone changes act directly on chromatin structure
H4K16ac is enriched on the male X chromosome, which is hyperactive
It inhibits 30 nm fiber formation
Because it makes chromatin less compact and more accessible
Histone variants and modifications act as marks read by other proteins, which then change chromatin function
Histone changes act indirectly by recruiting reader proteins
H3K9 methylation marks compact chromatin in the chromocentre
HP1, heterochromatin protein 1
It compacts chromatin
Both say histone variants and histone modifications help regulate chromatin activity and gene expression
The accessibility hypothesis says histone changes directly change DNA-histone affinity, while the histone code hypothesis says they are marks read by other proteins
Compact DNA, block promoters, and mark chromatin regions as active or inactive
A change in gene expression that is not due to a change in DNA sequence
The DNA sequence stays the same, but gene expression changes
Because cells must re-establish the same gene expression patterns after chromosomes were condensed and transcription was shut down
No
All eukaryotes
DNA-binding proteins
MSL proteins marking the overactive X chromosome in male Drosophila
DNA-binding RNAs
Xist RNA marking the inactive X chromosome in female mammals
CenH3 histones marking centromeres in euk chromosomes
H4K16ac marking the overactive X chromosome in male Drosophila
No, it can increase or decrease gene expression depending on context
