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1.
A novel nuclease activity have been detected at three specific sites in the chromatin of the spacer region flanking the 5'-end of the ribosomal RNA gene from Tetrahymena. The endogenous nuclease does not function catalytically in vitro, but is in analogy with the DNA topoisomerases activated by strong denaturants to cleave DNA at specific sites. The endogenous cleavages have been mapped at positions +50, -650 and -1100 relative to the 5'-end of the pre-35S rRNA. The endogenous cleavage sites are associated with micrococcal nuclease hypersensitive sites and DNase I hypersensitive regions. Thus, a single well-defined micrococcal nuclease hypersensitive site is found approximately 130 bp upstream from each of the endogenous cleavages. Clusters of defined sites, the majority of which fall within the 130 bp regions defined by vicinal micrococcal nuclease and endogenous cleavages, constitute the DNase I hypersensitive regions.  相似文献   

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We examined the chromatin organizations of approximately 3 kb of DNA in the 5'-end flanking region of the ovalbumin gene in chicken erythrocyte and oviduct cell nuclei. With specific DNA probes and an indirect end-labeling technique, we analysed the pattern of the DNA fragments obtained after micrococcal nuclease digestion and generated comparative maps of the nuclease cuts. This region of the chicken genome displays a "typical" chromatin arrangement in erythrocyte nuclei, with nucleosomes apparently positioned at random. In contrast, in oviduct nuclei, the same region has an "altered" chromatin structure, and lacks a typical nucleosomal array. The existence of specifically positioned proteins and of alterations in the DNA secondary structure in this region of the oviduct chromatin is suggested by comparison of the nuclease cleavage maps which reveals specific changes: disappearance of nuclease cuts present in "naked" and erythrocyte chromatin DNAs, and appearance of new cuts absent from these DNAs.  相似文献   

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To analyse the relationship between DNA undermethylation at some sites in the ovalbumin and conalbumin gene regions (1) and the expression of these genes in chick oviduct, digestions with HhaI, which differentiates between methylated and unmethylated HhaI restriction sites, was performed on DNA isolated from chicken erythrocyte or oviduct chromatin treated with DNase I which degrades preferentially "active" chromatin. This was followed by analysis with ovalbumin- and conalbumin-specific hybridization probes. We conclude that the residual DNA methylation found at some sites of the ovalbumin and conalbumin gene regions is derived from the fraction of cells in which the chromatin of these genes is not in an "active" form. On the other hand, the ovalbumin and conalbumin sites which are partially unmethylated in erythrocyte DNA correspond to chromatin regions which are not DNase I-senitive. We have also detected a site about 1 kb downstream from the 3' end of the conalbumin gene that is hypersensitive to DNase I in all tissues tested.  相似文献   

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DNase I was used to probe the molecular organization of the chicken ovalbumin (OV) gene and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) gene in interphase nuclei and in metaphase chromosomes of cultured chicken lymphoblastoid cells (MSB-1 line). The OV gene was not transcribed in this cell line, whereas the GPD gene was constitutively expressed. The GPD gene was more sensitive to DNase I digestion than the OV gene in both interphase nuclei and metaphase chromosomes, as determined by Southern blotting and liquid hybridization techniques. In addition, we observed DNase I hypersensitive sites around the 5' region of the GPD gene. These hypersensitive sites were not always at the same locations between the interphase nuclei and metaphase chromosomes. Our results suggest that chromatin condensation and decondensation during cell cycle alters nuclease hypersensitive cleavage sites.  相似文献   

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Nuclease sensitivity of active chromatin.   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The active regions of chicken erythrocyte nuclei were labeled using the standard DNase I directed nick translation reaction. These nuclei were then used to study the characteristics and, in particular, the nuclease sensitivity of active genes. Although DNase I specifically attacks active genes, micrococcal nuclease solubilizes these regions to about the same degree as the total DNA. On the other hand micrococcal nuclease does selectively cut the internucleosomal regions of active genes resulting in the appearance of mononucleosomal fraction which is enriched in active gene DNA. A small percentage of the active chromatin is also released from the nucleus by low speed centrifugation following micrococcal nuclease treatment. The factors which make active genes sensitive to DNase I were shown to reside on individual nucleosomes from these regions. This was established by showing that isolated active mononucleosomes were preferentially sensitive to DNase I digestion. Although the high mobility group proteins are essential for the maintenance of DNase I sensitivity in active regions, these proteins are not necessary for the formation of the conformation which makes these genes preferentially accessible to micrococcal nuclease. The techniques employed in this paper enable one to study the chromatin structure of the entire population of actively expressed genes. Previous studies have elucidated the structure of a few special highly prevalent genes such as ovalbumin and hemoglobin. The results of this paper show that this special conformation is a general feature of all active genes irregardless of the extent of expression.  相似文献   

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The role of local sequence information in establishing the chromatin structure of the human c-myc upstream region (MUR) was investigated. Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene transduction was used to introduce an additional unrearranged copy of the 2.4 kb HindIII-XhoI fragment of the MUR into a novel location in the genome in each of two cloned HeLa cell lines. The AAV-based rep- cap- viral vector SKMA used to transduce the MUR retained only 1.4 kb (24%) of the AAV genome and could accommodate inserts as large as 2.4 kb. SKMA was capable of infecting HeLa cells and integrating into the host genome at single copy number. Integration may have occurred at a preferred site in the HeLa genome, but this site was apparently distinct from the previously identified preferred AAV integration site on human chromosome 19. Indirect end-labelling was used to map DNase I and micrococcal nuclease (MNase) cleavage sites over the transduced c-myc sequences and the endogenous c-myc loci in infected HeLa cells. A similarly ordered chromatin domain, extending 5' from c-myc promoter P0, was found to exist at the transduced c-myc locus in each clone. The position and relative sensitivity of 13 MNase cleavage sites and five DNase I hypersensitive sites, originally identified at the endogenous MUR in non-transduced cells, were shown to be conserved when this DNA was moved to a new chromosome site. A conserved DNase I hypersensitive site also was mapped to the region between the left AAV terminal repeat and AAV promoter P5. These results suggest that the information required to establish the particular chromatin structure of the MUR resides within the local DNA sequence of that region.  相似文献   

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In mouse myeloma T the productive kappa light chain gene differs from its aberrantly rearranged allele in the patterns of DNAase I hypersensitive sites. In the region of the alleles where they are identical in sequence they have one site in common which lies 0.8 kb downstream of the coding region; but two sites upstream of and within the C gene segment (2) are found only on the non-productive allele. Within the region of different sequences both alleles have analogously located DNAase I hypersensitive sites; they lie 0.15 kb upstream of the respective leader segments and cover putative promoter sequences. Only one of the six DNAase I hypersensitive sites is also very sensitive towards micrococcal nuclease due to its particular DNA sequence. The non-rearranged gene studied in liver nuclei has no DNAase I hypersensitive sites but is preferentially cleaved in A/T rich regions.  相似文献   

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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   

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A sensitive method for measuring nuclear volumes with a Coulter counter is described. It has been applied to the digestion of chicken erythrocyte nuclei by micrococcal nuclease and DNase I. Early in digestion, micrococcal nuclease induced a 20% increase in the effective spherical volume of the nuclei, followed by a gradual reduction. At the peak of nuclear swelling, about 17% of the chromatin was soluble after lysis and its average chain length was about 18 kilobase pairs (kb). DNase I digestion did not give rise to a corresponding expansion of the nuclei. Several preparation conditions, including the treatment of nuclei with 0.2% Triton X-100, led to a loss of the expansion effect upon subsequent micrococcal nuclease digestion. The results support the domain theory of higher order chromatin structure. In the context of this model, the observed maximum nuclear expansion correlates with an average of one nuclease scission per domain.  相似文献   

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A Almer  W H?rz 《The EMBO journal》1986,5(10):2681-2687
The chromatin structure of two tandemly linked acid phosphatase genes (PHO5 and PHO3) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was analyzed under conditions at which the strongly regulated PHO5 gene is repressed. Digestion experiments with DNase I, DNase II, micrococcal nuclease and restriction nucleases reveal the presence of five hypersensitive sites at the PHO5/PHO3 locus, two of them upstream of PHO5 at distances of 920 and 370 bp, one in between the two genes and two downstream of PHO3. Specifically positioned nucleosomes are located next to these hypersensitive sites as shown by indirect end-labeling experiments. The positions deduced from these experiments could be verified by monitoring the accessibility of various restriction sites to the respective nucleases. Sites within putative linker regions were about 50-60% susceptible, whereas sites located within nucleosome cores were resistant. Hybridizing micrococcal nuclease digests to a probe from in between the two upstream hypersensitive sites leads to an interruption of an otherwise regular nucleosomal DNA pattern. This shows directly that these hypersensitive sites represent gaps within ordered nucleosomal arrays.  相似文献   

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We have mapped DNase I-hypersensitive sites and topoisomerase II (topo II) sites in the chicken beta-globin locus, which contains four globin genes (5'-rho-beta H-beta A-epsilon-3'). In the 65 kilobases (kb) mapped, 12 strong hypersensitive sites were found clustered within the 25-kb region from 10 kb upstream of rho to just downstream of epsilon. The strong sites were grouped into several classes based on their tissue distribution, developmental pattern, and location. (i) One site was present in all cells examined, both erythroid and nonerythroid. (ii) Three sites, located upstream of the rho-globin gene, were present at every stage of erythroid development, but were absent from nonerythroid cells. (iii) Four sites at the 5' ends of each of the four globin genes were hypersensitive only in the subset of erythroid cells that were transcribing or had recently transcribed the associated gene. (iv) Another three sites, whose pattern of hypersensitivity also correlated with expression of the associated gene, were found 3' of rho, beta H, and epsilon. (v) A site 3' of beta A and 5' of epsilon was erythroid cell specific and present at all developmental stages, presumably reflecting the activity of this enhancer throughout erythroid development. We also mapped the topo II sites in this locus, as determined by teniposide-induced DNA cleavage. All strong teniposide-induced cleavages occurred at DNase I-hypersensitive sites, while lesser amounts of cleavage were observed in transcribed regions of DNA. Most but not all of the DNase I-hypersensitive sites were topo II sites. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that, in vivo, topo II preferentially acts on nucleosome-free regions of DNA but suggest that additional topo II regulatory mechanisms must exist.  相似文献   

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Structure of transcriptionally active chromatin   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
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