The nucleosome is an octamer containing DNA wrapped around one histone H3–H4 tetramer and two histone H2A–H2B dimers. Within the nucleosome, histones are decorated with posttranslational modifications. Previous studies indicate that the H3–H4 tetramer is conserved during DNA replication, suggesting that old tetramers serve as a template for the modification of newly synthesized tetramers. Here, we present a method that merges bioorthogonal chemistry with mass spectrometry for the study of modifications on newly synthesized histones in mammalian cells. HeLa S3 cells are dually labeled with the methionine analog azidohomoalanine and heavy 13C6, 15N4 isotope labeled arginine. Heavy amino acid labeling marks newly synthesized histones while azi...