The High
Mobility Group (HMG) Proteins
Other than spesific enzymes (to be discussed in the
next section), the HMG proteins are the most extensively characterized group of
non-histone proteins. They are readly identified on the basis of their high
solubility in the mineral acids, their lack of tissue or specificity, and their
high concentration in the nucleus28, 73, 80, 95. Four main HMG
proteins have been have been characterized in calf thymus, designated HMG1,
HMG2, HMG14, HMG17 in order of increasing electrophoretic mobility in acid
urea; smiliar proteins have been identified in most other tissue and species
examined. One possible exception is trout testes, which has only two major HMG
proteins; the H6 protein which has 50% sequence homology with calf HMG17, and
HMG-T, which has been composed with calf HMG1 and HMG256, 95. The
HMG proteins are all presents in nucleosomes isolated from chromatin by limited
digestion with micrococcal nuclease, but can be completely dissociated from
chromatin by the treatment with 0.35 mol/ℓ NaCl. Isolated HMG proteins will be
rebind to DNA at low ionic strength and although there is no apperent sequence specificity in this binding, HMG1
and HMG2 have a preferential affinity for single stranded DNA and the potential
to unwind double stranded DNA1, 38, 41, 82, 103.
Experiments
in which transcriptionally active chromatin has been selectively solubilized by
various types of nuclease tratment have led to the general genes. This
conclusion is not without controversy and apparent contradictions, however
probably because HMG protein relase has not always been adequately quantified
and it is sometimes difficult to compare HMG proteins from different organisms.
Thus preferential relase of HMG1 and HMG2 by selective digestion of active
chromatin with Dnase I has been reported for calf thymus, pig thymus, mouse
brain, and duck erythrocytes53, 72, 93, but such release has not
been confirmed in studies on rabbit thymus and liver29. Likewise
HMG-T, a trout testis HMG protein which is supposedly similar to HMG1 and HMG2,
is not preferentially released by DNase I57. On the other hand
pereferentially release of H6 has been reported in trout testis digests55,
56, while HMG17, which is sometimes compared to H6, is not released in
some laboratories29, 52, 72, but is released in others98.
All the HMG proteins have been found associated with 0.1 mol/ℓ NaCl soluble
mononucleosomes30, 53, 54, which are reportedly enriched in
transcribed DNA sequences.
The
sub-nucleosomal localization of the HMG proteins is difficult to define with
precision at present. In trout testis, H6 has been found on nucleosomal core particles in
transcribed chromatin, whereas HMG-T appears to be associated with the
internucleosomal linker regions immediately adjacent to those core nucleosomes
containing proteins H654. Similarly, in other organisms HMG14 and
HMG17 appear to be closely associated with core particles30.62,
while HMG1 and HMG2 may be present on linker DNA. The polar nature of HMG14 and
HMG17 is believed to permit their binding to both the histone octamer and the
nucleosomal DNA in core particles, where
as HMG1 and HMG2 bind DNA, are apparently found as homopolymers in vivo37
and can partake in hydrophobic interactions17, all of which may
point to their presence on linker DNA
where they may either crosslink the chromatin filament by head-to-tail
interactions with other HMG proteins or with Histone H1. Alternatively, it
hasbeenproposed that they replace histone H1 on the linker DNA, and are thereby
involved in the decondensation of transcribed chromatin.
The
role of HMG14 and HMG17 in the structure of transcribed chromatin is less
controversial. It has been observed that transcribed genomic sequencesin
chromatin lose their preferential sensitivity to DNase I in the absence of HMG
14 and HMG17, but this sensitivity can be restored by reconstitution of HMG14
and HMG17 back to HMG-depleted chromatin25, 31, 84, 98, 99 100. This
observation is also true for crude mononucleosomes preparations. Indicating
that the HMG proteins sensitive the nucleosomal DNA to DNase I in a linker
DNA-independent fashion. Such a conclusion is further supported by the
observation that in whole chromatin HMG14 and HMG17 sensitize transcribed
sequences in the absence of histone H1 (or H5). The reconstitution studies and
the use of affinity chromatography with immobilized HMG14 and HMG17have
estabilished that HMG14 and HMG17 selectively bind to nuclosomes containing actively
transcribed sequences conferring upon them sensitivy to DNase I digestion.
Thus, HMG14 and HMG17 appear to bind to nucleosomes in a sequence-spesific
fashion, in spite of the fact that they bind naked DNA with no apparent
sequences specificity.
The
biochemical basis for the specific binding of HMG14 and HMG17 to active
nucleosomes is not clear at present. Attemps to identify the factors involved
have included the use of nucleosomes washed with 0.6 mol/
ℓ NaCl , as well as nucleosomes dissociated in high salt urea and then reconstituted, but
in both cases the spectificity of HMG binding is retained99. In
addition, no individual type of non-histone protein is present on nucleosomes
in sufficient amounts to imply a role in HMG-nucleosomes recognitionsin. In
fact, the 0.6 mol/ ℓ NaCl washed nucleosomes have no detectablenon-histone proteins at all.
Nucleosomes to which HMG14 and HMG17 bind selectively have been reported to be
distinguished by an enrichment in acetylated histones and undermethylated DNA
sequences97, 99. While the role of the undermethylane DNA sequences
in HMG recognitionin uncertain, the levels of histone acetylation appear to be
insufficient in themselves to explain the molar specifity of HMG binding to
active nucleosomes. Competition studies have shown that the histone H2A-H2B
dimer, but not the H3-H4 dimer, wil, compete with HMG14 and HMG17 for binding
sites on active nucleosomes , suggesting that the HMG proteins bind to a site
which normally interacts with Histone H2A and H2B, perhaps the H3- H4; DNA
complex HMG14 and HMG17 thus appear to be able to recognize a specific
nucleosomal conformation which may be induced by a combination of histone and
DNA post-synthetic modifications, implying that enzimatyc non-histone proteins
present in substoichiometric amounts may be ultimately responsible for
determining the structureof chromosomal sequences destined to be transcribed or
repressed.
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