Roles of histone chaperone Nap1 and histone acetylation in regulating phase-separation of chromatin arrays
Roles of histone chaperone Nap1 and histone acetylation in regulating phase-separation of chromatin arrays
Gao, J.; Li, H.; Tan, S.; Zhou, R.; Lee, T.-H.
AbstractChromatin condensation is dynamically regulated throughout the cell cycle and plays key roles in modulating gene accessibility at the highest physical level in a cell. The DNA-histone dynamics in short- and long-range inter-nucleosomal interactions are central to the regulation mechanisms of chromatin condensation which remain under active investigation. We employed 12-mer nucleosome arrays to investigate the roles of histone chaperone Nap1, and histone H3 and H4 N-terminal tails and their acetylation in regulating the formation and the properties of phase-separated chromatin condensates. These arrays form liquid-like condensate droplets under a physiological salt condition of 150 mM NaCl. According to our results from bright-field microscopy, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, optical super-resolution imaging, and microrheology with optical tweezers, histone H4 tail lysine residues are the main drivers of liquid-liquid phase separation of chromatin arrays. We also found that the condensed liquid-like droplets contain both a mobile fraction and a relatively immobile structural scaffold and that histone chaperone Nap1 and histone H3 tail acetylation facilitate DNA-histone dynamics within the structural scaffold to lower the overall viscosity of the droplets. These results suggest that histone chaperone and histone H3/H4 tails play critical roles in regulating chromatin condensation and gene accessibility in condensed chromatin.