Litcius/Paper detail

Primate-specific histone variants

Dongbo Ding, Thi Thuy Nguyen, Matthew Yu Hin Pang, Toyotaka Ishibashi

2020Genome18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Canonical histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) are present in all eukaryotes where they package genomic DNA and participate in numerous cellular processes, such as transcription regulation and DNA repair. In addition to the canonical histones, there are many histone variants, which have different amino acid sequences, possess tissue-specific expression profiles, and function distinctly from the canonical counterparts. A number of histone variants, including both core histones (H2A/H2B/H3/H4) and linker histones (H1/H5), have been identified to date. Htz1 (H2A.Z) and CENP-A (CenH3) are present from yeasts to mammals, and H3.3 is present from Tetrahymena to humans. In addition to the prevalent variants, others like H3.4 (H3t), H2A.Bbd, and TH2B, as well as several H1 variants, are found to be specific to mammals. Among them, H2BFWT, H3.5, H3.X, H3.Y, and H4G are unique to primates (or Hominidae). In this review, we focus on localization and function of primate- or hominidae-specific histone variants.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyHistoneHistone H3GeneticsHistone codeNucleosomeHistone-modifying enzymesHistone methylationHistone H2ATetrahymenaHistone H1DNACell biologyGeneGene expressionDNA methylationGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA Research and SplicingEpigenetics and DNA Methylation