Effects of Acetylation of Histone H4 at Lysines 8 and 16 on Activity of the Hat1 Histone Acetyltransferase*

Abstract

During nucleosome assembly in vivo, newly synthesized histone H4 is specifically diacetylated on lysines 5 and 12 within the H4 NH2-terminal tail domain. The highly conserved “K5/K12” deposition pattern of acetylation is thought to be generated by the Hat1 histone acetyltransferase, which in vivo is found in the HAT-B complex. In the following report, the activity and substrate specificity of the human HAT-B complex and of recombinant yeast Hat1p have been examined, using synthetic H4 NH2-terminal peptides as substrates. As expected, the unacetylated H4 peptide was a good substrate for acetylation by yeast Hat1p and human HAT-B, while the K5/K12-diacetylated peptide was not significantly acetylated. Notably, an H4 peptide previously diacetylated on lysines 8 and 16 was a very poor substrate for acetylation by either yeast Hat1p or human HAT-B. Treating the K8/K16-diacetylated peptide with histone deacetylase prior to the HAT-B reaction raised acetylation at K5/K12 to 70–80% of control levels. These results present strong support for the model of H4-Hat1p interaction proposed by Dutnall et al. (Dutnall, R. N., Tafrov, S. T., Sternglanz, R., and Ramakrishnan, V. (1998)Cell 94, 427–438) and provide evidence for the first time that site-specific acetylation of histones can regulate the acetylation of other substrate sites.

  • Abbreviations:
    HAT
    histone acetyltransferase
    HDAC
    histone deacetylase
    RB
    retinoblastoma
    • Received September 24, 2001.
    • Revision received October 1, 2001.
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    This Article

    1. The Journal of Biological Chemistry 276, 43499-43502.
    1. All Versions of this Article:
      1. C100549200v1
      2. 276/47/43499 (most recent)

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