Stochastic nucleosome disassembly mediated by remodelers and histone fragmentation

Author:

Li Xiangting1ORCID,Chou Tom12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computational Medicine, University of California 1 , Los Angeles, California 90095-1766, USA

2. Department of Mathematics, University of California 2 , Los Angeles, California 90095-1555, USA

Abstract

We construct and analyze monomeric and multimeric models of the stochastic disassembly of a single nucleosome. Our monomeric model predicts the time needed for a number of histone–DNA contacts to spontaneously break, leading to dissociation of a non-fragmented histone from DNA. The dissociation process can be facilitated by DNA binding proteins or processing molecular motors that compete with histones for histone–DNA contact sites. Eigenvalue analysis of the corresponding master equation allows us to evaluate histone detachment times under both spontaneous detachment and protein-facilitated processes. We find that competitive DNA binding of remodeling proteins can significantly reduce the typical detachment time but only if these remodelers have DNA-binding affinities comparable to those of histone–DNA contact sites. In the presence of processive motors, the histone detachment rate is shown to be proportional to the product of the histone single-bond dissociation constant and the speed of motor protein procession. Our simple intact-histone model is then extended to allow for multimeric nucleosome kinetics that reveal additional pathways of disassembly. In addition to a dependence of complete disassembly times on subunit–DNA contact energies, we show how histone subunit concentrations in bulk solutions can mediate the disassembly process by rescuing partially disassembled nucleosomes. Moreover, our kinetic model predicts that remodeler binding can also bias certain pathways of nucleosome disassembly, with higher remodeler binding rates favoring intact-histone detachment.

Funder

Army Research Office

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Why Are Nucleosome Breathing Dynamics Asymmetric?;The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters;2024-01-05

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