Tag Content
SG ID
SG00013633 
UniProt Accession
Theoretical PI
10.58  
Molecular Weight
13553 Da  
Genbank Nucleotide ID
Genbank Protein ID
Gene Name
H2afz 
Gene Synonyms/Alias
H2az 
Protein Name
Histone H2A.Z 
Protein Synonyms/Alias
H2A/z 
Organism
Mus musculus (Mouse) 
NCBI Taxonomy ID
10090 
Chromosome Location
chr:3;137527451-137529886;1
View in Ensembl genome browser  
Function in Stage
Uncertain 
Function in Cell Type
Uncertain 
Probability (GAS) of Function in Spermatogenesis
0.625858341 
The probability was calculated by GAS algorithm, ranging from 0 to 1. The closer it is to 1, the more possibly it functions in spermatogenesis.
Description
Temporarily unavailable 
Abstract of related literatures
1. This study describes comprehensive polling of transcription start and termination sites and analysis of previously unidentified full-length complementary DNAs derived from the mouse genome. We identify the 5' and 3' boundaries of 181,047 transcripts with extensive variation in transcripts arising from alternative promoter usage, splicing, and polyadenylation. There are 16,247 new mouse protein-coding transcripts, including 5154 encoding previously unidentified proteins. Genomic mapping of the transcriptome reveals transcriptional forests, with overlapping transcription on both strands, separated by deserts in which few transcripts are observed. The data provide a comprehensive platform for the comparative analysis of mammalian transcriptional regulation in differentiation and development. PMID: [16141072] 

2. The National Institutes of Health's Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC) project was designed to generate and sequence a publicly accessible cDNA resource containing a complete open reading frame (ORF) for every human and mouse gene. The project initially used a random strategy to select clones from a large number of cDNA libraries from diverse tissues. Candidate clones were chosen based on 5'-EST sequences, and then fully sequenced to high accuracy and analyzed by algorithms developed for this project. Currently, more than 11,000 human and 10,000 mouse genes are represented in MGC by at least one clone with a full ORF. The random selection approach is now reaching a saturation point, and a transition to protocols targeted at the missing transcripts is now required to complete the mouse and human collections. Comparison of the sequence of the MGC clones to reference genome sequences reveals that most cDNA clones are of very high sequence quality, although it is likely that some cDNAs may carry missense variants as a consequence of experimental artifact, such as PCR, cloning, or reverse transcriptase errors. Recently, a rat cDNA component was added to the project, and ongoing frog (Xenopus) and zebrafish (Danio) cDNA projects were expanded to take advantage of the high-throughput MGC pipeline. PMID: [15489334] 

3. Each variant of histone 2A from mouse L1210 cells separates into at lest three bands on acid-urea gels, an unmodified band b0, and modified bands b1, b2, and, in the case of H2A.Z, b3. By analyzing tryptic peptides from these proteins on 50% acrylamide peptide gels, one can quantitate the fraction of H2A modified in various ways. With this methodology, the b1 form of H2A.1 was found to be a mixture of molecules, two-thirds of which were acetylated at lysine5 and one-third of which were phosphorylated at serine1. The b2 band of H2A.1 contained molecules with phosphorylated serine1, acetylated lysine5, and one or two other sites of modification not found in b1 H2A.1 b2 H2A.1 was not composed solely of molecules each with both a phosphorylated serine1 and an acetylated lysine5. The heteromorphous H2A variant H2A.X can be phosphorylated and acetylated. The phosphorylation site was the same as in H2A.1, but the acetylation site was slightly different. The heteromorphous variant H2A.Z was different from the other H2As in that it was not phosphorylated, and it did not contain the NH2-terminal peptide, which is the phosphorylation site in the .X, .1, and .2 variants. Its acetylation pattern was also different from that of H2A.1 in that two sites, neither of which was found in H2A.1, seem to be involved at the first level of modification. PMID: [7217105] 

4. Fundamental to the process of mammalian development is the timed and coordinated regulation of gene expression. This requires transcription of a precise subset of the total complement of genes. It is clear that chromatin architecture plays a fundamental role in this process by either facilitating or restricting transcription factor binding [1]. How such specialized chromatin structures are established to regulate gene expression is poorly understood. All eukaryotic organisms contain specialized histone variants with distinctly different amino acid sequences that are even more conserved than the major core histones [2]. On the basis of their highly conserved sequence, histone variants have been assumed critical for the function of mammalian chromatin; however, a requirement for a histone variant has not been shown in mammalian cells. Mice with a deletion of H1 degrees have been generated by gene targeting in ES cells, but these mice show no phenotypic consequences, perhaps due to redundancy of function [3]. Here we show for the first time that a mammalian histone variant, H2A.Z, plays a critical role in early development, and we conclude that this histone variant plays a pivotal role in establishing the chromatin structures required for the complex patterns of gene expression essential for normal mammalian development. PMID: [11516949] 

5. Determining how chromatin is remodelled during early development, when totipotent cells begin to differentiate into specific cell types, is essential to understand how epigenetic states are established. An important mechanism by which chromatin can be remodelled is the replacement of major histones with specific histone variants. During early mammalian development H2A.Z plays an essential, but unknown, function(s). We show here that undifferentiated mouse cells of the inner cell mass lack H2A.Z, but upon differentiation H2A.Z expression is switched on. Strikingly, H2A.Z is first targeted to pericentric hetero chromatin and then to other regions of the nucleus, but is excluded from the inactive X chromosome and the nucleolus. This targeted incorporation of H2A.Z could provide a critical signal to distinguish constitutive from facultative heterochromatin. In support of this model, we demonstrate that H2A.Z can directly interact with the pericentric heterochromatin binding protein INCENP. We propose that H2A.Z functions to establish a specialized pericentric domain by assembling an architecturally distinct chromatin structure and by recruiting specific nuclear proteins. PMID: [12660166] 

6. Controlling the degree of higher order chromatin folding is a key element in partitioning the metazoan genome into functionally distinct chromosomal domains. However, the mechanism of this fundamental process is poorly understood. Our recent studies suggested that the essential histone variant H2A.Z and the silencing protein HP1alpha may function together to establish a specialized conformation at constitutive heterochromatic domains. We demonstrate here that HP1alpha is a unique chromatin binding protein. It prefers to bind to condensed higher order chromatin structures and alters the chromatin-folding pathway in a novel way to locally compact individual chromatin fibers without crosslinking them. Strikingly, both of these features are enhanced by an altered nucleosomal surface created by H2A.Z (the acidic patch). This shows that the surface of the nucleosome can regulate the formation of distinct higher order chromatin structures mediated by an architectural chromatin binding protein. PMID: [15546624] 

7. The histone variant H2A.Z plays an essential role in metazoans but its function remains to be determined. Here, we developed a new inducible RNAi strategy to elucidate the role of H2A.Z in mammalian cell lines. We show that in the absence of H2A.Z, the genome becomes highly unstable and that this instability is caused by defects in the chromosome segregation process. Analysis of H2A.Z localization reveals that in these cells it is enriched at heterochromatic foci with HP1alpha on the arms of chromosomes but not at centromeric regions. When H2A.Z is depleted, normal HP1alpha-chromatin interactions are disrupted on the chromosomal arms and, notably, also at pericentric regions. Therefore, H2A.Z controls the localization of HP1alpha. We conclude that H2A.Z is essential for the accurate transmission of chromosomes. PMID: [15195148] 

8. The replacement histone H2A.Z is variously reported as being linked to gene expression and preventing the spread of heterochromatin in yeast, or concentrated at heterochromatin in mammals. To resolve this apparent dichotomy, affinity-purified antibodies against the N-terminal region of H2A.Z, in both a triacetylated and non-acetylated state, are used in native chromatin immmuno-precipitation experiments with mononucleosomes from three chicken cell types. The hyperacetylated species concentrates at the 5' end of active genes, both tissue specific and housekeeping but is absent from inactive genes, while the unacetylated form is absent from both active and inactive genes. A concentration of H2A.Z is also found at insulators under circumstances implying a link to barrier activity but not to enhancer blocking. Although acetylated H2A.Z is widespread throughout the interphase genome, at mitosis its acetylation is erased, the unmodified form remaining. Thus, although H2A.Z may operate as an epigenetic marker for active genes, its N-terminal acetylation does not. PMID: [16204459] 

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Function
Variant histone H2A which replaces conventional H2A in asubset of nucleosomes. Nucleosomes wrap and compact DNA intochromatin, limiting DNA accessibility to the cellular machinerieswhich require DNA as a template. Histones thereby play a centralrole in transcription regulation, DNA repair, DNA replication andchromosomal stability. DNA accessibility is regulated via acomplex set of post-translational modifications of histones, alsocalled histone code, and nucleosome remodeling. May be involved inthe formation of constitutive heterochromatin. May be required forchromosome segregation during cell division. Essential for earlydevelopment. 
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Subcellular Location
Nucleus. Chromosome. Note=Enriched inconstitutive heterochromatin. Absent from facultativeheterochromatin of the inactive X chromosome. 
Tissue Specificity
 
Gene Ontology
GO IDGO termEvidence
GO:0000786 C:nucleosome IEA:UniProtKB-KW.
GO:0005634 C:nucleus IDA:MGI.
GO:0003677 F:DNA binding IEA:UniProtKB-KW.
GO:0007275 P:multicellular organismal development IEA:UniProtKB-KW.
GO:0006334 P:nucleosome assembly IEA:InterPro.
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Interpro
IPR009072;    Histone-fold.
IPR007125;    Histone_core_D.
IPR002119;    Histone_H2A.
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Pfam
PF00125;    Histone;    1.
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SMART
SM00414;    H2A;    1.
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PROSITE
PS00046;    HISTONE_H2A;    1.
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PRINTS
PR00620;    HISTONEH2A.;   
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Created Date
18-Oct-2012 
Record Type
GAS predicted 
Sequence Annotation
INIT_MET      1      1       Removed (By similarity).
CHAIN         2    128       Histone H2A.Z.
                             /FTId=PRO_0000055298.
REGION        2     17       Required for interaction with INCENP.
REGION       93    103       Required for interaction with INCENP.
MOD_RES       5      5       N6-acetyllysine (Probable).
MOD_RES       8      8       N6-acetyllysine (Probable).
MOD_RES      12     12       N6-acetyllysine (Probable).
MOD_RES      14     14       N6-acetyllysine (By similarity).
CROSSLNK    122    122       Glycyl lysine isopeptide (Lys-Gly)
                             (interchain with G-Cter in ubiquitin) (By
                             similarity).
CONFLICT     12     12       K -> E (in Ref. 3; BAE30460).
CONFLICT     29     29       P -> A (in Ref. 3; BAE26959).
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Nucleotide Sequence
Length: 989 bp   Go to nucleotide: FASTA
Protein Sequence
Length: 128 bp   Go to amino acid: FASTA
The verified Protein-Protein interaction information
UniProt
Gene Symbol Ref Databases
BtkIntAct 
H2afzBioGRID 
H2afzBioGRID 
_BioGRID 
Ryr1IntAct 
Hist1h3aIntAct 
Hist1h3bIntAct 
H3f3aIntAct 
Vps72MINT 
Other Protein-Protein interaction resources
String database  
View Microarray data
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