Eukaryotic Cell
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EC Accepts, published online ahead of print on 4 January 2008
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EC.00409-07v1
7/3/471    most recent
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Eukaryotic Cell doi:10.1128/EC.00409-07
Copyright (c) 2008, American Society for Microbiology and/or the Listed Authors/Institutions. All Rights Reserved.

A class II HDAC deacetylates newly synthesized histones in Tetrahymena

Joshua J. Smith, Sharon E. Torigoe, Julia Maxson, Lisa C. Fish, and Emily A. Wiley*

Joint Science Department, Claremont-McKenna, Scripps, and Pitzer Colleges, Claremont, California 91711

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: ewiley{at}jsd.claremont.edu.


   Abstract

Newly synthesized histones are acetylated prior to their deposition into nucleosomes. Following nucleosome formation and positioning, they are rapidly deacetylated, an event that coincides with further maturation of the chromatin fiber. The histone deacetylases (HDACs) used for histone deposition and de novo chromatin formation are poorly understood. In the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila, transcription-related deacetylation in the macronucleus is physically separated from deposition-related deacetylation in the micronucleus. This feature was utilized to identify an HDAC named Thd2, a class II histone deacetylase, that acts on newly synthesized histones to remove deposition-related acetyl moieties. The THD2 transcript is alternatively spliced, and the major form contains a putative inositol polyphosphate kinase (IPK) domain similar to Ipk2, an enzyme that promotes chromatin remodeling by SWI/SNF remodeling complexes. Cells lacking Thd2, which retain deposition-related acetyl moieties on new histones, exhibit chromatin and cytological phenotypes indicative of a role for Thd2 in chromatin maturation including the proteolytic processing of histone H3.







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