Mitosis‐specific histone H3 phosphorylation in vitro in nucleosome structures

Abstract
A mechanism of mitosis-specific enhancement of histone H3 phosphorylation was analyzed in vitro in terms of nucleosome structure. The incorporation of [32P]phosphate into DNA-bound H3 was approximately 5-7 times higher than in DNA-free H3 using the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The two major N-terminal serine sites, including the mitosis-specific site (Ser10) and Ser28, were extensively phosphorylated in the DNA-bound forms. These phosphorylation patterns were identical to those of nucleosomal H3. In contrast, the H3 in DNA-free octamers was very slightly phosphorylated. The major site of H3 phosphorylation in DNA-free H3 was Thr118 in the C-terminus. Results indicate that DNA-binding is essential for the high level of mitosis-specific H3 phosphorylation, and that the nucleosome structure promotes H3 N-terminal phosphorylation in vitro. It also suggests the possibility that H1 prevents H3 phosphorylation during interphase of the cell cycle.