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Histone H1 Is required for proper regulation of pyruvate decarboxylase gene expression in Neurospora crassa.


ABSTRACT: We show that Neurospora crassa has a single histone H1 gene, hH1, which encodes a typical linker histone with highly basic N- and C-terminal tails and a central globular domain. A green fluorescent protein-tagged histone H1 chimeric protein was localized exclusively to nuclei. Mutation of hH1 by repeat-induced point mutation (RIP) did not result in detectable defects in morphology, DNA methylation, mutagen sensitivity, DNA repair, fertility, RIP, chromosome pairing, or chromosome segregation. Nevertheless, hH1 mutants had mycelial elongation rates that were lower than normal on all tested carbon sources. This slow linear growth phenotype, however, was less evident on medium containing ethanol. The pyruvate decarboxylase gene, cfp, was abnormally derepressed in hH1 mutants on ethanol-containing medium. This derepression was also found when an ectopically integrated fusion of the cfp gene promoter to the reporter gene hph was analyzed. Thus, Neurospora histone H1 is required for the proper regulation of cfp, a gene with a key role in the respiratory-fermentative pathway.

SUBMITTER: Folco HD 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC154839 | biostudies-literature | 2003 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Histone H1 Is required for proper regulation of pyruvate decarboxylase gene expression in Neurospora crassa.

Folco H Diego HD   Freitag Michael M   Ramón Ana A   Temporini Esteban D ED   Alvarez María E ME   García Irene I   Scazzocchio Claudio C   Selker Eric U EU   Rosa Alberto L AL  

Eukaryotic cell 20030401 2


We show that Neurospora crassa has a single histone H1 gene, hH1, which encodes a typical linker histone with highly basic N- and C-terminal tails and a central globular domain. A green fluorescent protein-tagged histone H1 chimeric protein was localized exclusively to nuclei. Mutation of hH1 by repeat-induced point mutation (RIP) did not result in detectable defects in morphology, DNA methylation, mutagen sensitivity, DNA repair, fertility, RIP, chromosome pairing, or chromosome segregation. Ne  ...[more]

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