Significance
Acetylation is an important post-translational modification of proteins that has been extensively described in Eukaryotes, and more recently in Bacteria. Here, we report for the first time ever that histones in Archaea are also modified by acetylation after a systematic survey of acetylated peptides in Thermococcus gammatolerans. Structural models of histones A and B indicates that acetylation of the identified modified residues may play an important role in histone assembly and/or interaction with DNA. The in-depth protein acetylome landscape in T. gammatolerans includes at least 181 unique protein sequences, some of them being modified on numerous residues. Proteins involved in metabolic processes, information storage and processing mechanisms are over-represented categories in this dataset, highlighting the ancient role of this protein post-translational modification in primitive cells.
