A recently discovered post-translational
modification of histone
proteins is the irreversible proteolytic clipping of the histone N-terminal
tail domains. This modification is involved in the regulation of various
biological processes, including the DNA damage response. In this work,
we used chemical footprinting to characterize the structural alterations
to nucleosome core particles (NCPs) that result from a lack of a histone
H2B or H3 tail. We also examine the influence of these histone tails
on excision of the mutagenic lesion 1,N
6-ethenoadenine (εA) by the repair enzyme alkyladenine DNA glycosylase.
We found that the absence of the H2B or H3 tail results in altered
DNA periodicity relative to that of native NCPs. We correlated these
structural alterations to εA excision by utilizing a global
analysis of 21 εA sites in NCPs and unincorporated duplex DNA.
In comparison to native NCPs, there is enhanced excision of εA
in tailless H2B NCPs in regions that undergo DNA unwrapping. This
enhanced excision is not observed for tailless H3 NCPs; rather, excision
is inhibited in more static areas of the NCP not prone to unwrapping.
Our results support in vivo observations of alkylation
damage profiles and the potential role of tail clipping as a mechanism
for overcoming physical obstructions caused by packaging in NCPs but
also reveal the potential inhibition of repair by tail clipping in
some locations. Taken together, these results further our understanding
of how base excision repair can be facilitated or diminished by histone
tail removal and contribute to our understanding of the underlying
mechanism that leads to mutational hot spots.