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. 1996 Oct;39(4):491-501.
doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0282(199610)39:4%3C491::AID-BIP2%3E3.0.CO;2-S.

Carboxyl-terminal peptides from histone H1 variants: DNA binding characteristics and solution conformation

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Carboxyl-terminal peptides from histone H1 variants: DNA binding characteristics and solution conformation

S E Wellman. Biopolymers. 1996 Oct.

Abstract

The carboxyl-terminal domains of the histone H1 proteins bind to DNA and are important in condensation of DNA. Little is known about the details of the interactions between H1 histones and DNA, and in particular, there is little known about differences among variant H1 histones in their interactions with DNA. Questions concerning H1 histone-DNA affinity and H1 conformation were investigated using peptide fragments from the carboxyl terminal domains of four nonallelic histone H1 variant proteins (mouse H1-1, H1-4 and H1(0), and rat H1t). Three of the four peptides showed a slight preference for binding to a GC-rich region of a 214-base-pair DNA fragment, rather than to an AT-rich region. The fourth peptide, H1t, appeared to bind preferentially to the AT-rich region of the 214-base-pair fragment. The results show that these small peptides bind preferentially to a subset of DNA sequences: such sequence preference might be exhibited by the intact H1 histones themselves. CD spectra of the peptides, which are from regions of the proteins that are not compactly folded, showed that the alpha-helical content of the peptides was minimal if the peptides were in 10 mM phosphate buffer, but increased if the peptides were in 1M NaClO4 and 50% trifluoroethanol, conditions that are postulated to approximate certain aspects of binding to DNA. H1-4 peptide, which was predicted to be 70% alpha-helix, but was not alpha-helical in 10 mM phosphate buffer, appeared from difference CD spectra to be more alpha-helical when it was bound to DNA. The regions of the proteins from which these peptides are derived, which are extended in solution, may fold, forming alpha-helices, upon binding to DNA.

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