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A giant virus genome is densely packaged by stable nucleosomes within virions

Terri D. Bryson, Pablo De Ioannes, Marco Igor Valencia‐Sánchez, Jorja G. Henikoff, Paul B. Talbert, Rachel Lee, Bernard La Scola, Karim‐Jean Armache, Steven Henikoff

2022Molecular Cell37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The two doublet histones of Marseillevirus are distantly related to the four eukaryotic core histones and wrap 121 base pairs of DNA to form remarkably similar nucleosomes. By permeabilizing Marseillevirus virions and performing genome-wide nuclease digestion, chemical cleavage, and mass spectrometry assays, we find that the higher-order organization of Marseillevirus chromatin fundamentally differs from that of eukaryotes. Marseillevirus nucleosomes fully protect DNA within virions as closely abutted 121-bp DNA-wrapped cores without linker DNA or phasing along genes. Likewise, we observed that nucleosomes reconstituted onto multi-copy tandem repeats of a nucleosome-positioning sequence are tightly packed. Dense promiscuous packing of fully wrapped nucleosomes rather than "beads on a string" with genic punctuation represents a distinct mode of DNA packaging by histones. We suggest that doublet histones have evolved for viral genome protection and may resemble an early stage of histone differentiation leading to the eukaryotic octameric nucleosome.

Topics & Concepts

NucleosomeBiologyHistoneLinker DNADNAGenomeChromatinMicrococcal nucleaseGeneticsHistone methylationCell biologyGeneDNA methylationGene expressionPlant Virus Research StudiesBacteriophages and microbial interactionsAnimal Virus Infections Studies
A giant virus genome is densely packaged by stable nucleosomes within virions | Litcius