首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We have examined in some detail the chromatin structure of a 6.2 kilobase pair (kbp) chromosomal region containing the chicken beta-globin gene. The chromatin structure was probed with three nucleases, DNase I, micrococcal nuclease, and DNase II, and the rate of digestion of specific subfragments of the region was compared with the rate of bulk DNA digestion. We have characterized the rate of digestion of each fragment in terms of a sensitivity factor which measures the sensitivity of a fragment to a particular nuclease relative to bulk DNA. The sensitivity factors were determined by a least squares curve fitting method based on target analysis. In nuclei isolated from 14-day-old chicken embryo red blood cells, the entire 6.2-kbp region shows approximately a 10- to 20-fold increase in sensitivity to DNase I, a 3-fold increased sensitivity to micrococcal nuclease, and a 6-fold increased sensitivity to DNase II. In addition to the adult beta-globin gene, this region contains 5' and 3' flanking sequences, the 5' half of the inactive, embryonic globin gene, epsilon, and some repeated sequences. There is no obvious correlation between these genetic elements and the overall chromatin structure as measured by the nuclease sensitivity. This same region shows little or no special sensitivity in nuclei isolated from 14-day-old chicken embryo brain. Furthermore, fragments of the inactive ovalbumin gene show little or no sensitivity in either red blood cells or brain. These results support the conclusion that the entire 6.2-kbp region is largely packaged as active chromatin in 14-day-old chicken embryo red blood cells.  相似文献   

2.
Nuclei of substantial purity were isolated from the middle or posterior silk glands of the silkworm Bombyx mori larvae. Both the fibroin H- and L-chain gene sequences in the isolated nuclei from the posterior silk glands of the fifth instar larvae, where the genes are transcribed actively, are extremely sensitive to the digestion with DNaseI; on the other hand, these sequences in the middle silk gland nuclei from the same larvae, where the genes are not expressed, are markedly resistant to the digestion. The H-chain gene sequences in the posterior silk gland nuclei from the fifth instar larvae are also highly susceptible to the digestion with micrococcal nuclease, HinfI, and HhaI. The digestion products with micrococcal nuclease show a continuous size distribution. The H-chain gene sequences in the middle silk gland nuclei or the posterior silk gland nuclei from the fourth molting stage are cleaved partially into nucleosome dimer to oligomer sizes upon digestion with higher concentrations of micrococcal nuclease, suggesting that the inactive forms of the H-chain gene chromatin are constructed by folding of the chromatin fiber containing a regular array of nucleosomes. Hypersensitive sites to micrococcal nuclease are present near both ends of the second exon, a major body of the fibroin H-chain gene, in both the active and inactive forms of the chromatin. The DNaseI or micrococcal nuclease sensitivity of the H-chain gene chromatin in the posterior silk gland nuclei shows periodical changes corresponding to the intermolt-molt-intermolt cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The influence of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cis-DDP) binding to chromatin in chicken erythrocyte nuclei and the nucleosomal core particle is investigated. The cis-DDP modifications alter DNA-protein interactions associated with the higher order structure of chromatin to significantly inhibit the rate of micrococcal nuclease digestion and alter the digestion profile. However, cis-DDP modification of core particle has little effect on the digestion rate and the relative distribution of DNA fragments produced by microccocal nuclease digestion. Analysis of the monomer DNA fragments derived from the digestion of modified nuclei suggests that cis-DDP binding does not significantly disrupt the DNA structure within the core particle, with its major influence being on the internucleosomal DNA. Together these findings suggest that cis-DDP may preferentially bind to the internucleosomal region and/or that the formation of the intrastrand cross-link involving adjacent guanines exhibits a preference for the linker region. Sucrose gradient profiles of the modified nucleoprotein complexes further confirm that the digestion profile for micrococcal nuclease is altered by cis-DDP binding and that the greatest changes occur at the initial stages of digestion. The covalent cross-links within bulk chromatin fix a sub-population of subnucleosomal and nucleosomal products, which are released only after reversal by NaCN treatment. Coupled with our previous findings, it appears that this cis-DDP mediated cross-linking network is primarily associated with protein-protein crosslinks of the low mobility group (LMG) proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Previously, human hepatitis B virus (HBV) mutant 164, which has a truncation at the C terminus of the HBV core antigen (HBcAg), was speculated to secrete immature genomes. For this study, we further characterized mutant 164 by different approaches. In addition to the 3.5-kb pregenomic RNA (pgRNA), the mutant preferentially encapsidated the 2.2-kb or shorter species of spliced RNA, which can be reverse transcribed into double-stranded DNA before virion secretion. We observed that mutant 164 produced less 2.2-kb spliced RNA than the wild type. Furthermore, it appeared to produce at least two different populations of capsids: one encapsidated a nuclease-sensitive 3.5-kb pgRNA while the other encapsidated a nuclease-resistant 2.2-kb spliced RNA. In contrast, the wild-type core-associated RNA appeared to be resistant to nuclease. When arginines and serines were systematically restored at the truncated C terminus, the core-associated DNA and nuclease-resistant RNA gradually increased in both size and signal intensity. Full protection of encapsidated pgRNA from nuclease was observed for HBcAg 1-171. A full-length positive-strand DNA phenotype requires positive charges at amino acids 172 and 173. Phosphorylation at serine 170 is required for optimal RNA encapsidation and a full-length positive-strand DNA phenotype. RNAs encapsidated in Escherichia coli by capsids of HBcAg 154, 164, and 167, but not HBcAg 183, exhibited nuclease sensitivity; however, capsid instability after nuclease treatment was observed only for HBcAg 164 and 167. A new hypothesis is proposed here to highlight the importance of a balanced charge density for capsid stability and intracapsid anchoring of RNA templates.  相似文献   

5.
The structures of DNAs present in various intracellular forms of simian virus 40 (SV40) nucleoprotein complexes were analyzed by micrococcal nuclease digestion. The results showed that the 70S SV40 chromatin was completely sensitive to nuclease digestion, whereas CsCl gradient-purified mature virion was completely resistant. Virion assembly intermediates with different degrees of virion maturation showed intermediate resistance, and three products were found: nucleosomal DNA fragments, representing the fraction of intermediates that were sensitive to nuclease; linear SV40 genome-sized DNA, representing the more mature intermediates that contained one or limited defects in the capsid shell; and supercoiled SV40, which was derived from mature virions. These digestion products, however, remained associated with capsid shells after nuclease digestion. These results were consistent with the model in which maturation of the SV40 virion is achieved through the organization of capsid proteins that accumulate around SV40 chromatin. Mild digestion of SV40 nucleoprotein complexes with micrococcal nuclease revealed the difference in nucleosome repeat length between SV40 chromatin and virion assembly intermediates. A novel DNA fragment of about 75 nucleotides was observed early in nuclease digestion.  相似文献   

6.
The positions and relative frequencies of the primary cleavages made by micrococcal nuclease on the DNA of nucleosome core particles have been found by fractionating the double-stranded products of digestion and examining their single-stranded compositions. This approach overcomes the problems caused by secondary events such as the exonucleolytic and pseudo-double-stranded actions of the nuclease and, combined with the use of high resolution gel electrophoresis, enables the cutting site positions to be determined with a higher precision than has been achieved hitherto. The micrococcal nuclease primary cleavage sites lie close (on average, within 0.5 nucleotide) to those previously determined by Lutter (1981) for the nucleases DNase I and DNase II. These similarities show that the accessible regions are the same for all three nucleases, the cleavage sites being dictated by the structure of the nucleosome core. The differences in the final products of the digestion are explained in terms of secondary cleavage events of micrococcal nuclease. While the strongly protected regions of the nucleosome core DNA are common to all three nucleases, there are differences in the relative degrees of cutting at the more exposed sites characteristic of the particular enzyme. In particular, micrococcal nuclease shows a marked polarity in the 3'-5' direction in the cutting rates as plotted along a single strand of the nucleosomal DNA. This is explained in terms of the three-dimensional structure of the nucleosome where, in any accessible region of the double helix, the innermost strand is shielded by the outermost strand on the one side and the histone core on the other. The final part of the paper is concerned with the preference of micrococcal nuclease to cleave at (A,T) sequences in chromatin.  相似文献   

7.
DNA isolated from (a) liver chromatin digested in situ with endogenous Ca2+, Mg2+-dependent endonuclease, (b) prostate chromatin digested in situ with micrococcal nuclease or pancreatic DNAase I, and (c) isolated liver chromatin digested with micrococcal nuclease or pancreatic DNAase I has been analyzed electrophoretically on polyacrylamide gels. The electrophoretic patterns of DNA prepared from chromatin digested in situ with either endogenous endonuclease (liver nuclei) or micrococcal nuclease (prostate nuclei) are virtually identical. Each pattern consists of a series of discrete bands representing multiples of the smallest fragment of DNA 200 +/- 20 base pairs in length. The smallest DNA fragment (monomer) accumulates during prolonged digestion of chromatin in situ until it accounts for nearly all of the DNA on the gel; approx. 20% of the DNA of chromatin is rendered acid soluble during this period. Digestion of liver chromatin in situ in the presence of micrococcal nuclease results initially in the reduction of the size of the monomer from 200 to 170 base pairs of DNA and subsequently results in its conversion to as many as eight smaller fragments. The electrophoretic pattern obtained with DNA prepared from micrococcal nuclease digests of isolated liver chromatin is similar, but not identical, to that obtained with liver chromatin in situ. These preparations are more heterogeneous and contain DNA fragments smaller than 200 base pairs in length. These results suggest that not all of the chromatin isolated from liver nuclei retains its native structure. In contrast to endogenous endonuclease and micrococcal nuclease digests of chromatin, pancreatic DNAase I digests of isolated chromatin and of chromatin in situ consist of an extremely heterogeneous population of DNA fragments which migrates as a continuum on gels. A similar electrophoretic pattern is obtained with purified DNA digested by micrococcal nuclease. The presence of spermine (0.15 mM) and spermidine (0.5 mM) in preparative and incubation buffers decreases the rate of digestion of chromatin by endogenous endonuclease in situ approx. 10-fold, without affecting the size of the resulting DNA fragments. The rates of production of the smallest DNA fragments, monomer, dimer, and trimer, are nearly identical when high molecular weight DNA is present in excess, indicating that all of the chromatin multimers are equally susceptible to endogenous endonuclease. These observations points out the effects of various experimental conditions on the digestion of chromatin by nucleases.  相似文献   

8.
R W Parish  E Banz    P J Ness 《Nucleic acids research》1986,14(5):2089-2107
We have used methidiumpropyl-EDTA-iron(II) [MPE.Fe(II)] in parallel with micrococcal nuclease to investigate the chromatin structure of the extrachromosomal palindrome ribosomal RNA genes of Dictyostelium. Confirming our earlier results with micrococcal nuclease (1,2), MPE.Fe(II) digested the coding region of rapidly transcribing rRNA genes as a smear, indicating the absence or severe disruption of nucleosomes, whereas in slowly transcribing rRNA genes, a nucleosomal ladder was produced. In the central non-transcribed spacer region of the palindrome, MPE.Fe(II) digestion resulted in a normal nucleosomal repeat, whereas micrococcal nuclease gave a complex banding pattern. The difference is attributed to the lower sequence specificity of MPE.Fe(II) compared to micrococcal nuclease. In the terminal region of the palindrome, however, both substances gave a complex chromatin digestion pattern. In this region the DNA appears to be packaged in structures strongly positioned with respect to the underlying DNA sequence.  相似文献   

9.
Ostrow KM  Loeb DD 《Journal of virology》2004,78(16):8780-8787
Packaging of hepadnavirus pregenomic RNA (pgRNA) into capsids, or encapsidation, requires several viral components. The viral polymerase (P) and the capsid subunit (C) are necessary for pgRNA encapsidation. Previous studies of duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) indicated that two cis-acting sequences on pgRNA are required for encapsidation: epsilon, which is near the 5' end of pgRNA, and region II, located near the middle of pgRNA. Later studies suggested that the intervening sequence between these two elements may also make a contribution. It has been demonstrated for DHBV that epsilon interacts with P to facilitate encapsidation, but it is not known how other cis-acting sequences contribute to encapsidation. We analyzed chimeras of DHBV and a related virus, heron hepatitis B virus (HHBV), to gain insight into the interactions between the various viral components during pgRNA encapsidation. We learned that having epsilon and P derived from the same virus was not sufficient for high levels of encapsidation, implying that other viral interactions contribute to encapsidation. Chimeric analysis showed that a large sequence containing region II may interact with P and/or C for efficient encapsidation. Further analysis demonstrated that possibly an RNA-RNA interaction between the intervening sequence and region II facilitates pgRNA encapsidation. Together, these results identify functional interactions among various viral components that contribute to pgRNA encapsidation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
To determine whether diabetes alters chromatin structure in vivo, micrococcal nuclease digestion kinetics were analyzed in cerebral cortical and hepatic nuclei of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Cerebral nuclei of diabetic rats maintained for 6 weeks were less susceptible to micrococcal nuclease digestion compared with control rats. Insulin treatment reversed diabetes-related changes in nuclease digestion kinetics. There were no changes in the kinetics of digestion in hepatic nuclei. The reduced digestibility of cerebral DNA in diabetes could not be attributed to altered DNA fluorescence spectra, or altered distribution of most abundant chromatin proteins that were either solubilized or that remained insoluble immediately following nuclease digestion. It is concluded that chronic, uncontrolled hyperglycemia can alter chromatin structure of some tissues in vivo, and this change is probably related to subtle alterations in DNA-protein interactions.  相似文献   

13.
14.
We have investigated the micrococcal nuclease digestion of chromatin from the spermatozoa of the sea cucumber Holothuria tubulosa. This chromatin contains minor protein variants related to histone H1 with a high proportion of basic amino acids. One of these variants, protein phi 0, represents about 4% of the total histones. It is 78 amino acids long and its amino acid composition and sequence are related to the very basic C-terminal region of histone H1. The presence of these proteins induces an unusual digestion pattern. Oligonucleosomal particles which are soluble at 150 mM NaCl are depleted of protein phi 0 and they are also defective in histone H1. A low percentage of the insoluble material can be solubilized at lower NaCl concentrations (50 mM). These oligonucleosomal particles show a very peculiar protein content, since at early digestion times, they contain histone H1 and protein phi 0 exclusively. We conclude that these particles arise from a cooperative displacement of core histones by protein phi 0 and histone H1. These results show that minor changes in histone H1 complement can result in the formation of artifactual particles upon microccocal nuclease digestion. These observations may be of interest in other systems which contain H1 variants.  相似文献   

15.
To test a previously coined “charge balance hypothesis” of human hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid stability, we established an in vitro disassembly and reassembly system using bacterially expressed HBV capsids. Capsid disassembly can be induced by micrococcal nuclease digestion of encapsidated RNA. HBV core protein (HBc) mutants containing various amounts of arginine were constructed by serial truncations at the C terminus. Capsids containing smaller amounts of arginine (HBc 149, 154, and 157) remained intact after micrococcal nuclease digestion by native gel electrophoresis. Capsids containing larger amounts of arginine (HBc 159, 164, 169, and 171) exhibited reduced and more diffuse banding intensity and slightly upshifted mobility (HBc 159 and 164). Capsids containing the largest amounts of arginine (HBc 173, 175, and 183), as well as HBc 167, exhibited no detectable banding signal, indicating loss of capsid integrity or stability. Interestingly, capsid reassembly can be induced by polyanions, including oligonucleotides, poly-glutamic acid, and nonbiological polymer (polyacrylic acid). In contrast, polycations (polylysine and polyethylenimine) and low-molecular-weight anions (inositol triphosphate) induced no capsid reassembly. Results obtained by gel assay were confirmed by electron microscopy. Reassembled capsids comigrated with undigested parental capsids on agarose gels and cosedimented with undigested capsids by sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation. Taken together, the results indicate that HBV capsid assembly and integrity depend on polyanions, which probably can help minimize intersubunit charge repulsion caused mainly by arginine-rich domain III or IV in close contact. The exact structure of polyanions is not important for in vitro capsid reassembly. A large amount of independent experimental evidence for this newly coined “electrostatic interaction hypothesis” is discussed.Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) leads to the development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (6, 31, 36). HBV core protein (HBc) consists of the assembly domain (HBc amino acids 1 to 149) at the N terminus and the arginine-rich domain (ARD) at the C terminus (HBc amino acids 150 to 183) (33, 34). Escherichia coli-expressed HBc can spontaneously self-assemble into 28-nm capsid particles with a spherical appearance indistinguishable from that of human liver-derived capsid particles (7). Such capsid particles have been shown to package RNAs transcribed in E. coli (5, 8, 11, 28, 37). The four-helix bundle structure of HBV capsid particles is based on cryo-electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography using C-terminally truncated HBc (34, 38). At present, there is no known structure at the C terminus of HBc capsids (34, 41). HBc amino acids 150 to 183 contains four stretches of clustering arginine residues (ARD-I, -II, -III, and -IV) (Fig. (Fig.1).1). When the C-terminal domain of hepadnaviral core protein was serially truncated, a viral replication defect was observed (4, 19, 22, 27, 39). To date, it remains to be elucidated why the C terminus is so important for diverse biological activities, including RNA encapsidation and DNA replication. To address this issue, we proposed previously a so-called “charge balance hypothesis” (22), which highlights the importance of adequate electrostatic interactions between positive charge (basic residues) from HBc and negative charge from encapsidated RNA or DNA.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Effects of micrococcal nuclease treatment on HBV nucleocapsids with serially truncated C termini of core proteins. A series of HBV core expression vectors with different lengths and arginine contents were constructed in pET-Blue-1. The truncations are illustrated in the top panel, and the four ARDs (ARD-I, -II, -III, and -IV) are underlined. All constructs self-assembled into capsids when expressed in E. coli. The capsids run as a distinct band on 1% native agarose gels and can be stained with EtBr (upper panel) and Coomassie blue (middle panel). Untreated controls without micrococcal nuclease were incubated with the same buffer and conditions as for micrococcal nuclease-digested samples. In the upper panel, note the loss of the EtBr signal when the encapsidated RNAs were digested by micrococcal nuclease. In the middle panel, we observed three different groups of mutants with three different CBS patterns. Group 1 mutants, including HBc mutants 149, 154, and 157, exhibited no significant change in CBS banding pattern before or after micrococcal nuclease digestion. In group 2 capsids 159, 164, 169, and 171 (#), the CBS banding pattern became more diffuse, less intense, and slightly (yet reproducibly) upshifted. * indicates the near-complete loss of CBS banding in group 3 capsids 167, 173, 175, and 183. To confirm that this loss of CBS probably results from a loss of structural integrity of the capsid particle, rather than from a loss of the core protein per se, aliquots of samples were also run on denaturing SDS-PAGE (bottom panel).The first clue that such an electrostatic interaction could play an important role in RNA encapsidation is from the study of an engineered mutant, HBc 164. Despite its reduced arginine content relative to the wild-type (WT) full-length HBc 183 (Fig. (Fig.1),1), HBc mutant 164 can encapsidate, as efficiently as WT HBV, both 3.5-kb pregenomic RNA (pgRNA) and a spliced 2.2-kb subgenomic RNA (sgRNA) (19, 22). When WT HBV nucleocapsids (capsids) were treated with micrococcal nuclease, the encapsidated 3.5-kb pgRNA and its reverse-transcribing RNA template were resistant to micrococcal nuclease treatment. In contrast, when mutant 164 capsids were treated with micrococcal nuclease, the encapsidated 3.5-kb RNA was highly nuclease sensitive, while the encapsidated 2.2-kb sgRNA appeared to be nuclease resistant (19, 22).To further elucidate the mechanism behind this phenomenon, we hypothesized that this result could be due to an abnormal or less stable capsid structure generated by a charge imbalance (insufficient positive charge or excessive negative charge) when arginine-deficient mutant 164 encapsidates the full-length 3.5-kb pgRNA. In contrast, a more normal or stable capsid structure can be generated when arginine-deficient mutant 164 encapsidates the 2.2-kb sgRNA (with a reduced negative charge content relative to the 3.5-kb pgRNA) (22). In addition to RNA encapsidation and capsid stability, electrostatic interaction could also play a role in HBV DNA synthesis and genome maturation. For example, when the truncated C terminus of HBc 164 was progressively restored, the core-associated viral DNA gradually increased in both size and signal intensity (22).In this study, we designed an in vitro capsid disassembly/reassembly experiment which is complementary to the in vivo approach in tissue culture (22; P. K. Chua, F. M. Tang, J. Y. Huang, C. S. Suen, and C. Shih, submitted for publication). We investigated the relationship between the arginine content of HBV capsids and the encapsidated nucleic acid in maintaining capsid stability in vitro. In addition, we demonstrated that HBV capsids that are disassembled by depletion of encapsidated RNA can be efficiently reassembled in the presence of exogenous nucleic acid and non-nucleic acid polyanions but not in the presence of polycations or low-molecular-weight (low-MW) anions. Capsid disassembly induced by RNA digestion appears to be related to intersubunit charge repulsion between ARD-III or ARD-IV in close contact.  相似文献   

16.
The assumption that a different conformational form was induced in the nuclear estrogen receptor following binding by antiestrogens compared to estrogens was studied by analysing the proteolytic fragments of the receptor following limited digestion with chymotrypsin and trypsin. Nuclei were isolated from MCF-7 cells previously exposed to [3H] 4-OHTAM. The proteolytic digestion was performed either on the micrococcal nuclease hydrolysate or on intact nuclei. The molecular weights (Mr) were calculated from the sedimentation coefficients (S) determined on a sucrose gradient and from the Stokes radii (Rs) estimated by gel filtration. Digestion of the nuclei with micrococcal nuclease solubilized a receptor form of Mr = 155,000. This receptor form was degraded by chymotrypsin to a receptor of Mr = 63,000 which could not be further dissociated by 0.4 M KCl and 3 M urea. A similar receptor molecule was released by chymotrypsin from intact nuclei. Digestion of the micrococcal nuclease hydrolysate with trypsin degraded the receptor to a form of a Mr = 67,000 which could not be further dissociated by 0.4 M KCl and 3 M urea. Digestion of intact nuclei with trypsin followed by micrococcal nuclease, solubilized a receptor form of Mr = 80,000 which could be further dissociated with 0.4 M KCl and 3 M urea to a receptor form of Mr = 67,000. This trypsin degraded receptor form seems to be similar in Mr to the chymotrypsin degraded form. On the other hand different receptor fragments of Mr = 33,000 and Mr = 60,000 were excised by chymotrypsin and trypsin respectively from the estradiol ligated estrogen receptor. (Geier et al., J. steroid Biochem. 26 [1987] 35-40.) These results support the assumption of a different conformational form for the antiestrogen ligated receptor, compared to the estrogen ligated receptor since they were differentially susceptible to proteolytic degradation by chymotrypsin.  相似文献   

17.
Fragmentation of the actively transcribed kappa immunoglobulin gene in mouse myeloma nuclei with micrococcal nuclease and the restriction nuclease Bsp RI reveals a chromatin structure without the regularity of repeating nucleosomes found in bulk chromatin. Such regularity is restored about 2.2 kb 3' of the coding region. An only moderately increased micrococcal nuclease sensitivity and a 65% average protection of the Bsp RI sites indicates a DNA-protein interaction in the transcribed region which is not very different from that of an inactive gene. As determined by indirect endlabeling the frequency of Bsp RI cleavage both, after very mild and exhaustive digestion, varied moderately from site to site along the gene. In addition, it was not in each case the same at analogous sites on both alleles which are both transcribed. Thus, the experiments demonstrate differences between the chromatin structures of the genes which may be related to regulatory phenomena and thereby corroborate earlier findings made with DNAase I.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence for a subunit structure of chromatin in mouse myeloma cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
If micrococcal nuclease is allowed to digest chromatin as it exists inside intact nuclei isolated from mouse myeloma tissue culture cells, more than 60% of the DNA can be isolated as a homogeneous fragment on a sucrose gradient. Analytical ultracentrifugation indicates that the protected DNA is native, unnicked, and about 140 +/- 10 base pairs long. After less extensive nuclease digestion, the protected DNA migrates in gels in lengths which are integral multiples of this 140 base pair "monomer" band. A submonomer band, 105 "/- 10 base pairs long, can also be detected. Similar digestion patterns were obtained by two different nuclear isolation procedures and even when intact cells were gently lysed directly in the digestion medium. These results confirm and extend the chromatin digestion studies of previous investigators and provide support for a subunit model for eukaryotic chromatin. The single strand specific S1 nuclease did not digest intranuclear chromatin under the conditions used.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated nucleoli from exponentially growing microplasmodia of Physarum polycephalum were digested with micrococcal nuclease or DNAase I, or were photoreacted with trimethyl psoralen. In the coding region for the precursor of the ribosomal RNA, micrococcal nuclease and DNAase I digestions show predominantly a smear, and treatment with psoralen leads to a fairly continuous crosslinking of the DNA. All three assays are compatible with the absence of a typical nucleosomal array in most of the gene copies. In contrast, in the central non-transcribed spacer, except in the immediate 5'-flanking region, micrococcal nuclease and DNAase I digestions yield fragments that are multiples of a basic repeat, compatible with a nucleosomal packing of this region. The crosslinking pattern with psoralen confirms this conclusion. In addition, there are three sites over 400 base-pairs long that are inaccessible for psoralen crosslinking. Two of these sites have been mapped to the putative origins of replication. In the terminal non-transcribed spacer, except in the immediate 3'-flanking region, digestions with micrococcal nuclease and DNAase I give a smeared repeat. The crosslinking pattern after treatment with psoralen suggests that this region is packed in nucleosomes, except for about 900 base-pairs constituting the telomere regions of the linear extrachromosomal palindromic rDNA. Micrococcal nuclease digestion of the immediate 5'-flanking region shows a complete absence of any nucleosomal repeat, but digestion with DNAase I leads to a faint ten base-pair repeat. In contrast, in the 3'-flanking regions both nuclease assays indicate a chromatin structure similar to the coding region. Both flanking regions are unusual with respect to psoralen crosslinking, in that crosslinking is reduced both in chromatin and deproteinized DNA. On the basis of the known sequence-dependent psoralen crosslinking and the established sequences in these regions, crosslinking should be expected to occur. However, it does not and we therefore propose the presence of an unusual DNA conformation in these regions.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号