Zinc is Essential for the Copper Reductase Activity of Yeast Nucleosomes
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Abstract
The histone H3-H4 tetramer is a copper reductase enzyme, facilitating the production of cuprous (Cu 1+ ) ions for distribution to copper-dependent enzymes. It was, however, unknown if this enzymatic activity occurred within nucleosomes. To investigate this, we obtained native nucleosomes from Saccharomyces cerevisiae using micrococcal nuclease digestion of chromatin in isolated nuclei and ion-exchange chromatographic purification. The purified nucleosomal fragments robustly reduced Cu 2+ to Cu 1+ ions, with the optimal activity dependent on the presence of zinc ions. Mutation of the histone H3 histidine 113 (H3H113) residue at the active site substantially reduced the enzymatic activity of nucleosomes, underscoring the catalytic role of histone H3. Consistently, limiting zinc ions reduced intracellular Cu 1+ levels and compromised growth, phenotypes that were mitigated by genetically enhancing the copper reductase activity of histone H3. These results indicate that yeast nucleosomes possess copper reductase activity, suggesting that the fundamental unit of eukaryotic chromatin is an enzyme complex.
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