Genes & Genetic Systems
Online ISSN : 1880-5779
Print ISSN : 1341-7568
ISSN-L : 1341-7568
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A hypothesis for nucleosome evolution based on mutational analysis
Yu NakabayashiMasayuki Seki
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2025 Volume 100 Article ID: 24-00143

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Abstract

Nucleosomes are complexes of DNA and histone proteins that form the basis of eukaryotic chromatin. Eukaryotic histones are descended from archaeal homologs; however, how this occurred remains unclear. Our previous genetic analysis of the budding yeast nucleosome identified 26 histone residues conserved between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Trypanosoma brucei: 15 that are lethal when mutated and 11 that are synthetically lethal with deletion of the FEN1 nuclease. These residues are partially conserved in nucleosomes of a variety of giant viruses, allowing us to follow the route by which they were established in the LECA (last eukaryotic common ancestor). We analyzed yeast nucleosome genetic data to generate a model for the emergence of the eukaryotic nucleosome. In our model, histone H2B-H2A and H4-H3 doublets found in giant virus nucleosomes facilitated the formation of the acidic patch surface and nucleosome entry sites of the eukaryotic nucleosome, respectively. Splitting of the H2B-H2A doublet resulted in the H2A variant H2A.Z, and subsequent splitting of the H4-H3 doublet led to a eukaryote-specific domain required for chromatin binding of H2A.Z. We propose that the LECA emerged when the newly split H3 N-terminus horizontally acquired a common N-tail found in extinct pre-LECA lineages and some extant giant viruses. This hypothesis predicts that the emergence of the H3 variant CENP-A and the establishment of CENP-A-dependent chromosome segregation occurred after the emergence of the LECA, implying that the root of all eukaryotes is assigned within Euglenida

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