染色质
生物
组蛋白修饰酶
组蛋白
染色质重塑
进化生物学
核小体
计算生物学
遗传学
蛋白质组学
基因组
古细菌
比较基因组学
嘉雅宠物
基因组学
基因
作者
Xavier Grau‐Bové,Cristina Navarrete,Cristina Chiva,Thomas Pribasnig,Meritxell Antó,Guifré Torruella,Luis Javier Galindo,B. Franz Lang,David Moreira,Purificación López‐García,Iñaki Ruiz‐Trillo,Christa Schleper,Eduard Sabidó,Arnau Sebé-Pedrós
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41559-022-01771-6
摘要
Histones and associated chromatin proteins have essential functions in eukaryotic genome organization and regulation. Despite this fundamental role in eukaryotic cell biology, we lack a phylogenetically comprehensive understanding of chromatin evolution. Here, we combine comparative proteomics and genomics analysis of chromatin in eukaryotes and archaea. Proteomics uncovers the existence of histone post-translational modifications in archaea. However, archaeal histone modifications are scarce, in contrast with the highly conserved and abundant marks we identify across eukaryotes. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that chromatin-associated catalytic functions (for example, methyltransferases) have pre-eukaryotic origins, whereas histone mark readers and chaperones are eukaryotic innovations. We show that further chromatin evolution is characterized by expansion of readers, including capture by transposable elements and viruses. Overall, our study infers detailed evolutionary history of eukaryotic chromatin: from its archaeal roots, through the emergence of nucleosome-based regulation in the eukaryotic ancestor, to the diversification of chromatin regulators and their hijacking by genomic parasites. Comparative genomics and proteomics of archaea and eukaryotes are used to explore the evolutionary history of eukaryotic chromatin, including modifications, catalytic functions and relationship with genomic parasites.
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