Histone deacetylases (HDACs) catalyze the removal of acetyl groups from the -amino group of distinct lysine residues in the amino-terminal tail of core histones. Since the acetylation status of core histones plays a crucial role in fundamental processes in eukaryotic organisms, such as replication and regulation of transcription, recent research has focused on the enzymes responsible for the acetylation/deacetylation of core histones. Very recently, we showed that HdaA, a member of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae HDA1-type histone deacetylases, is a substantial contributor to total HDAC activity in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Now we demonstrate that deletion of the hdaA gene indeed results in the loss of the main activity peak and in a dramatic reduction of total HDAC activity. In contrast to its orthologs in yeast and higher eukaryotes, HdaA has strong intrinsic activity as a protein monomer when expressed as a recombinant protein in a prokaryotic expression system. In vivo, HdaA is involved in the regulation of enzymes which are of vital importance for the cellular antioxidant response in A. nidulans. Consequently, ⌬hdaA strains exhibit significantly reduced growth on substrates whose catabolism generates molecules responsible for oxidative stress conditions in the fungus. Our analysis revealed that reduced expression of the fungal catalase CatB is jointly responsible for the significant growth reduction of the hdaA mutant strains.In eukaryotic organisms, DNA and highly basic nuclear proteins, the histones, constitute the nucleosome, which is the essential structural subunit of the chromatin. The fact that the N-terminal extensions of the core histones contain distinct sites for various posttranslational modifications alters our view of chromatin as being a static entity for the efficient packing of the genomic DNA into the nucleus of the cell. Today it is accepted that, in addition to its structural role, chromatin has an important regulatory function during DNA replication and repair, cell cycle control, cell aging, and transcription (for a review, see reference 59).Antagonistic enzymes such as kinases/phosphatases (10, 39), histone methyltransferases/demethylases (for a review, see reference 9), and histone acetyltransferases/deacetylases (for a review, see reference 38) are responsible for a dynamic equilibrium of chromatin regulating modifications of the histone tails.The acetylation of distinct lysine residues of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 is the most prominent dynamic histone modification allowing or denying the access of numerous regulatory proteins, such as transcription factors, to distinct regions of genomic DNA. Although histone acetylation is by far the beststudied type of histone modification, our understanding of how this modification is linked to processes such as the regulation of transcription is still very limited. However, acetylated histones are a characteristic feature of transcriptionally active chromatin (2), and hypoacetylated histones accumulate within transcriptionally silenc...