Virus-encoded histone doublets are essential and form nucleosome-like structures.

Cell(2021)

Cited 49|Views15
No score
Abstract
The organization of genomic DNA into defined nucleosomes has long been viewed as a hallmark of eukaryotes. This paradigm has been challenged by the identification of "minimalist" histones in archaea and more recently by the discovery of genes that encode fused remote homologs of the four eukaryotic histones in Marseilleviridae, a subfamily of giant viruses that infect amoebae. We demonstrate that viral doublet histones are essential for viral infectivity, localize to cytoplasmic viral factories after virus infection, and ultimately are found in the mature virions. Cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of viral nucleosome-like particles show strong similarities to eukaryotic nucleosomes despite the limited sequence identify. The unique connectors that link the histone chains contribute to the observed instability of viral nucleosomes, and some histone tails assume structural roles. Our results further expand the range of "organisms" that require nucleosomes and suggest a specialized function of histones in the biology of these unusual viruses.
More
Translated text
Key words
NCLDV,giant virus,viral nucleosome,doublet histone,Analytical Ultracentrifugation,cryo-EM,viral factory,histone tail,acidic patch,non-eukaryotic nucleosome,nucleosome-like-particle,Melbournevirus genetics,KO fitness impact
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined