| Literature DB >> 31527083 |
Robert Anthony D'Ippolito1, Naoki Minamino2, Ciro Rivera-Casas3, Manjinder S Cheema4, Dina L Bai1, Harold E Kasinsky5, Jeffrey Shabanowitz1, Jose M Eirin-Lopez3, Takashi Ueda2,6, Donald F Hunt1,7, Juan Ausió8.
Abstract
Protamines are small, highly-specialized, arginine-rich, and intrinsically-disordered chromosomal proteins that replace histones during spermiogenesis in many organisms. Previous evidence supports the notion that, in the animal kingdom, these proteins have evolved from a primitive replication-independent histone H1 involved in terminal cell differentiation. Nevertheless, a direct connection between the two families of chromatin proteins is missing. Here, we primarily used electron transfer dissociation MS-based analyses, revealing that the protamines in the sperm of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha result from post-translational cleavage of three precursor H1 histones. Moreover, we show that the mature protamines are further post-translationally modified by di-aminopropanelation, and previous studies have reported that they condense spermatid chromatin through a process consisting of liquid-phase assembly likely involving spinodal decomposition. Taken together, our results reveal that the interesting evolutionary ancestry of protamines begins with histone H1 in both the animal and plant kingdoms.Entities:
Keywords: 14-3-3 protein; Marchantia; chromatography; di-aminopropanelation; electron microscopy (EM); histone; histone H1; mass spectrometry; mass spectrometry (MS); protamines
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31527083 PMCID: PMC6827293 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.010316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157