Direct histone proteoform profiling of the unannotated, endangered coral Acropora cervicornis

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Abstract

Epigenetic modifications directly regulate the patterns of gene expression by altering DNA accessibility and chromatin structure. A knowledge gap is presented by the need to directly measure these modifications, especially for unannotated organisms with unknown primary histone sequences. In the present work, we developed and applied a novel workflow for identifying and annotating histone proteoforms directly from mass spectrometry-based measurements for the endangered Caribbean coral Acropora cervicornis. Combining high-accuracy de novo top-down and bottom-up analysis based on tandem liquid chromatography, trapped ion mobility spectrometry, non-ergodic electron-based fragmentation, and high-resolution mass spectrometry, near complete primary sequence (up to 99%) and over 86 post-translational modification annotations were obtained from pull-down histone fractions. In the absence of reliable genome annotations, H2A, H2B, and H4 histone sequences and the annotation of the post-translational modifications of the stressed A. cervicornis coral allow for a better understanding of chromatin remodeling and new strategies for targeting intervention and restoration of endangered reef corals.

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Fuller, C. N., Mansoor, S., Jeanne Dit Fouque, K., Tose, L. V., Rodriguez-Casariego, J., Kosmopoulou, M., … Fernandez-Lima, F. (2025). Direct histone proteoform profiling of the unannotated, endangered coral Acropora cervicornis. Nucleic Acids Research, 53(14). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaf740

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