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1.
2.
The modification patterns of histones present in various forms of intracellular simian virus 40 nucleoprotein complexes were analyzed by acetic acid-urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The results showed that different viral nucleoprotein complexes contain different histone patterns. Simian virus 40 chromatin, which contains the activities for the synthesis of viral RNA and DNA, exhibits a histone modification pattern similar to that of the host chromatin. However, virion assembly intermediates and mature virions contain highly modified histones. Pulse-chase experiments with [3H]lysine showed that the newly incorporated histones in the virion assembly intermediates were already highly modified. The majority of in vivo acetylation activity of histones occurred on the 70S simian virus 40 chromatin as analyzed by pulse-labeling with [3H]acetate. These results and our previous analysis of the virion assembly pathway suggest that three stages are involved in the packaging of simian virus 40 chromatin into the mature virion: (i) modification of histones, (ii) accumulation of capsid protein around the chromatin with highly modified histones, and (iii) organization of capsid proteins into salt-resistant shells. The role of histone modification in virion assembly is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
To analyze the structure of the replicating regions of simian virus 40 nucleoprotein complex (SV40 chromatin), photochemical binding of 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) and changes in digestability with micrococcal nuclease were studied. 8-MOP bound preferentially to the linker DNA of nucleosomes and strongly inhibited nuclease digestion. Nuclease digestability of newly synthesized DNA in the replicating chromatin was markedly increased, but it was inhibited in the early time of nuclease reaction by photobinding of 8-MOP. The data suggest that the replicating regions of chromatin are more exposed than the bulk of mature chromatin.  相似文献   

4.
Maturation of newly replicated chromatin of simian virus 40 and its host cell   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
The DNA in replicating simian virus 40 chromatin and cellular chromatin was labeled with short pulses of [3H]thymidine. The structure of pulse-labeled nucleoprotein complexes was studied by micrococcal nuclease digestion. It was found that in both newly replicated viral and cellular chromatin, a structural state appears which is characterized by an increased sensitivity to nuclease and a faster than usual rate of cleavage to DNA fragments of monomeric nucleosome size and smaller. Pulse-chase experiments show that each of these effects requires a characteristic time to disappear in both systems, suggesting the existence of different sub-processes of chromatin maturation. One of these processes, detectable by the reversion of the unusually fast production of subnucleosomal fragments, is delayed in SV40 chromatin replication.  相似文献   

5.
Protein-free DNA in a cytosolic extract supplemented with SV40 large T-antigen (T-Ag), is assembled into chromatin structure when nuclear extract is added. This assembly was monitored by topoisomer formation, micrococcal nuclease digestion and psoralen crosslinking of the DNA. Plasmids containing SV40 sequences (ori- and ori+) were assembled into chromatin with similar efficiencies whether T-Ag was present or not. Approximately 50-80% of the number of nucleosomes in vivo could be assembled in vitro; however, the kinetics of assembly differed on replicated and unreplicated molecules. In replicative intermediates, nucleosomes were observed on both the pre-replicated and post-replicated portions. We conclude that the extent of nucleosome assembly in mammalian cell extracts is not dependent upon DNA replication, in contrast to previous suggestions. However, the highly sensitive psoralen assay revealed that DNA replication appears to facilitate precise folding of DNA in the nucleosome.  相似文献   

6.
Simian virus 40 chromatin interaction with the capsid proteins   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
It has been established that both in virions and in infected cells, the cellular core histones fold the SV40 DNA into nucleosomes to form the SV40 chromosome or chromatin. We and others have begun to examine how the capsid proteins assemble the SV40 chromatin into virions and to investigate whether these proteins interact with the encapsidated chromatin. To follow the pathway of virus assembly, we have analyzed the nucleoproteins which accumulate in cells infected with the SV40 mutants temperature-sensitive in assembly: tsC, tsBC, and tsB. (The temperature-sensitivity of these mutants result from alterations in the amino acid sequence of the major capsid protein VP1). We have found that mutants belonging to the same class accumulate similar types of nucleoproteins at the nonpermissive temperature (40 degrees C) and thus, share characteristics in common. For example, the tsC mutants accumulate only the 75 S chromatin. Both tsBC and tsB mutants produce in addition to chromatin, nucleoprotein complexes which sediment broadly from 100-160 S and contain all the three capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3. These nucleoproteins can be distinguished morphologically, however. Under the electron microscope, the tsBC 100-160 S nucleoproteins appear as chromatin to which a small cluster of the capsid proteins is attached; the tsB nucleoproteins appear as partially assembled virions. In addition, we find that the 220 S virions are assembled in cells coinfected with tsB and tsC mutants at 40 degrees C, in agreement with genetic analysis. Our observations favor the hypothesis that the VP1 protein contains three discrete domains. We speculate that each domain may play a specific function in SV40 assembly. To gain more insight into VP1-VP1 interactions, we have examined the nucleoproteins which result from treatment of the mature wild-type virions with increasing concentrations of the reducing agent DTT. In the presence of as low a concentration of DTT as 0.1 mM, the virion shell can be penetrated by micrococcal nuclease, which then cleaves the viral DNA. This result indicates that some of the disulfide bonds bridging the VP1 proteins are on the virion surface.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Chromatin assembly in isolated mammalian nuclei.   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Cellular DNA replication was stimulated in confluent monolayers of CV-1 monkey kidney cells following infection with SV40. Nuclei were isolated from CV-1 cells labeled with [3H]thymidine and then incubated in the presence of [alpha-32P]deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates under conditions that support DNA replication. To determine whether or not the cellular DNA synthesized in vitro was assembled into nucleosomes the DNA was digested in situ with either micrococcal nuclease or pancreatic DNase I, and the products were examined by electrophoretic and sedimentation analysis. The distribution of DNA fragment lengths on agarose gels following micrococcal nuclease digestion was more heterogeneous for newly replicated than for the bulk of the DNA. Nonetheless, the state of cellular DNA synthesized in vitro (32P-labeled) was found to be identical with that of the DNA in the bulk of the chromatin (3H-labeled) by the following criteria: (i) The extent of protection against digestion by micrococcal nuclease of DNase I. (ii) The size of the nucleosomes (180 base pairs) and core particles (145 base pairs). (iii) The number and sizes of DNA fragments produced by micrococcal nuclease in a limit digest. (iv) The sedimentation behavior on neutral sucrose gradients of nucleoprotein particles released by micrococcal nuclease. (v) The number and sizes of DNA fragments produced by DNase I digestion. These results demonstrate that cellular DNA replicated in isolated nuclei is organized into typical nucleosomes. Consequently, subcellular systems can be used to study the relationship between DNA replication and the assembly of chromatin under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Assembly of SV40 chromatin in a cell-free system from Xenopus eggs.   总被引:67,自引:0,他引:67  
R A Laskey  A D Mills  N R Morris 《Cell》1977,10(2):237-243
A cell-free system is described which assembles chromatin from purified DNA in 1 hr under physiological incubation conditions. It consists of a 145,000 x g (maximum) supernatant fraction from eggs of Xenopus laevis. It converts SV40 DNA to a nucleoprotein which co-sediments with naturally occurring SV40 chromatin and which can be cleaved by micrococcal nuclease to a highly ordered pattern of DNA fragments resembling those from digestion of liver chromatin. It inserts superhelical turns into relaxed, covalently closed DNA. The assembly process is not cooperative. Under limiting conditions, each DNA molecule becomes partially assembled. Assembly does not require replication of the DNA or protein synthesis, but occurs from a stored histone pool of at least 40 ng per egg. Under conditions of DNA excess, assembly becomes dependent upon the amount of exogenous histones added to the incubation. Apart from histones and a nicking-closing activity, chromatin assembly requires an additonal thermolabile factor which is present in the egg supernatant.  相似文献   

10.
The susceptibility of the DNA in chromatin to single strand-specific nucleases was examined using nuclease P1, mung bean nuclease, and venom phosphodiesterase. A stage in the reaction exists where the size range of the solubilized products is similar for each of the three nucleases and is nearly independent of incubation time. During this stage, the chromatin fragments sediment in the range of 30 to 100 S and contain duplex DNA ranging from 1 to 10 million daltons. Starting with chromatin depleted of histones H1 and H5 similar fragments are generated. In both cases these nucleoprotein fragments are reduced to nucleosomes and their multimers by micrococcal nuclease. Thus, chromatin contains a limited number of DNA sites which are susceptible to single strand-specific nucleases. These sites occur at intervals of 8 to 80 nucleosomes and are distributed throughout the chromatin. Nucleosome monomers, dimers, or trimers were not observed at any stage of single strand-specific nuclease digestion of nuclei, H1- and H5-depleted chromatin, or micrococcal nuclease-generated oligonucleosomes. Each of the three nucleases converted mononucleosomes (approximately 160 base pairs) to nucleosome cores (approximately 140 base pairs) probably by exonucleolytic action that was facilitated by the prior removal of H1 and H5. The minichromosome of SV40 is highly resistant to digestion by nuclease P1.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of inhibiting histone deacetylation on the maturation of newly replicated chromatin have been examined. HeLa cells were labeled with [3H]thymidine in the presence or absence of sodium butyrate; control experiments demonstrated that butyrate did not significantly inhibit DNA replication for at least 70 min. Like normal nascent chromatin, chromatin labeled for brief periods (0.5-1 min) in the presence of butyrate was more sensitive to digestion with DNase I and micrococcal nuclease than control bulk chromatin. However, chromatin replicated in butyrate did not mature as in normal replication, but instead retained approximately 50% of its heightened sensitivity to DNase I. Incubation of mature chromatin in butyrate for 1 h did not induce DNase I sensitivity: therefore, the presence of sodium butyrate was required during replication to preserve the increased digestibility of nascent chromatin DNA. In contrast, sodium butyrate did not inhibit or retard the maturation of newly replicated chromatin when assayed by micrococcal nuclease digestion, as determined by the following criteria: 1) digestion to acid solubility, 2) rate of conversion to mononucleosomes, 3) repeat length, and 4) presence of non-nucleosomal DNA. Consistent with the properties of chromatin replicated in butyrate, micrococcal nuclease also did not preferentially attack the internucleosomal linkers of chromatin regions acetylated in vivo. The observation of a novel chromatin replication intermediate, which is highly sensitive to DNase I but possesses normal resistance to micrococcal nuclease, suggests that nucleosome assembly and histone deacetylation are not obligatorily coordinated. Thus, while deacetylation is required for chromatin maturation, histone acetylation apparently affects chromatin organization at a level distinct from that of core particle or linker, possibly by altering higher order structure.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

It has been established that both in virions and in infected cells, the cellular core histones fold the SV40 DNA into nucleosomes to form the SV40 chromosome or chromatin. We and others have begun to examine how the capsid proteins assemble the SV40 chromatin into virions and to investigate whether these proteins interact with the encapsidated chromatin. To follow the pathway of virus assembly, we have analyzed the nucleoproteins which accumulate in cells infected with the SV40 mutants temperature-sensitive in assembly: tsC, tsBC, and tsB. (The temperature-sensitivity of these mutants result from alterations in the amino acid sequence of the major capsid protein VP1). We have found that mutants belonging to the same class accumulate similar types of nucleoproteins at the nonpermissive temperature (40°C) and thus, share characteristics in common. For example, the tsC mutants accumulate only the 75 S chromatin. Both tsBC and tsB mutants produce in addition to chromatin, nucleoprotein complexes which sediment broadly from 100–160 S and contain all the three capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3. These nucleoproteins can be distinguished morphologically, however. Under the electron microscope, the tsBC 100–160 S nucleoproteins appear as chromatin to which a small cluster of the capsid proteins is attached; the tsB nucleoproteins appear as partially assembled virions. In addition, we find that the 220 S virions are assembled in cells coinfected with tsB and tsC mutants at 40°C, in agreement with genetic analysis. Our observations favor the hypothesis that the VP1 protein contains three discrete domains. We speculate that each domain may play a specific function in SV40 assembly. To gain more insight into VP1-VP1 interactions, we have examined the nucleoproteins which result from treatment of the mature wild-type virions with increasing concentrations of the reducing agent DTT. In the presence of as low a concentration of DTT as 0.1 mM, the virion shell can be penetrated by micrococcal nuclease, which then cleaves the viral DNA. This result indicates that some of the disulfide bonds bridging the VP1 proteins are on the virion surface.  相似文献   

13.
The distribution of preformed ("old") histone octamers between the two arms of DNA replication forks was analyzed in simian virus 40(SV40)-infected cells following treatment with cycloheximide to prevent nucleosome assembly from nascent histones. Viral chromatin synthesized in the presence of cycloheximide was shown to be deficient in nucleosomes. Replicating SV40 DNA (wild-type 800 and capsid assembly mutant, tsB11) was radiolabeled in either intact cells or nuclear extracts supplemented with cytosol. Nascent nucleosomal monomers were then released by extensive digestion of isolated nuclei, nuclear extracts or isolated viral chromosomes with micrococcal nuclease. The labeled nucleosomal DNA was purified and found to hybridize to both strands of SV40 DNA restriction fragments taken from each side of the origin of DNA replication, whereas Okazaki fragments hybridized only to the strand representing the retrograde DNA template. In addition, isolated, replicating SV40 chromosomes were digested with two strand-specific exonucleases that excised nascent DNA from either the forward or the retrograde side of replication forks. Pretreatment of cells with cycloheximide did not result in an excess of prenucleosomal DNA on either side of replication forks, but did increase the amount of internucleosomal DNA. These data are consistent with a dispersive model for nucleosome segregation in which "old" histone octamers are distributed to both arms of DNA replication forks.  相似文献   

14.
Nucleoprotein complexes (core particles) released from simian virus 40 (SV40) virions were compared with similar complexes (SV40 chromatin) extracted from nuclei of infected cells. Core particles were sensitive to cleavage by DNase I at about the same enzyme concentration required to cleave SV40 chromatin. DNase I preferentially cleaved SV40 chromatin adjacent to the viral origin of replication; however, cleavage of core particles occurred with much less selectivity. The difference between these nucleoproteins was not due to a structural alteration induced by the virion disruption procedure, since SV40 chromatin retained its pattern of DNase I-sensitive sites when subjected top this treatment. On the other hand, core particles did not acquire the nuclease-sensitive feature typical of SV40 chromatin when they were exposed to infected cell nuclei and the Triton X-100-EDTA extraction procedure. Hence, the nuclease-sensitive feature was lost or altered during the normal process of virion assembly and maturation.  相似文献   

15.
We describe a novel system for two dimensional electrophoresis at neutral and alkaline pH for determining the double-stranded and single-stranded lengths of DNA. With this system we analysed the mode of micrococcal nuclease digestion of DNA in cellular and SV40 viral chromatin and of supercoiled SV40 DNA. The enzyme reaction occurred in two steps : the enzyme first introduced single-strand breaks, then converted these to double-strand breaks by an adjacent cleavage on the opposite strand. Digestion of cellular chromatin DNA occurred by a similar mechanism. Chromatin fragments produced by limited micrococcal nuclease action contained many single-strand breaks, which may be important when this method is used to prepare chromatin fragments for biochemical and biophysical studies. Nucleosome monomer to tetramer produced at later stages of digestion contained few if any single-strand breaks.  相似文献   

16.
Mechanism of chromatin assembly in Xenopus oocytes   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
We have analyzed the chromatin assembly reaction catalyzed by the Xenopus oocyte extract (S-150). A 50 S complex is formed upon mixing the 17 S pUC DNA and the S-150. Mature histones are not detected in this complex, which contains relaxed DNA and protein, and generates subnucleosomal 7 S particles upon digestion with micrococcal nuclease. The relaxed nucleoprotein is gradually supercoiled into nucleosomal chromatin in the S-150, via a pathway that requires ATP and is blocked by novobiocin, and this process is accompanied by the appearance of mature histones H3 and H4. Isolated complexes also supercoil in vitro, which implies the complex is a kit that contains histone precursors, as well as topoisomerases and other enzymes required for assembly. We discuss the biological implications of these findings.  相似文献   

17.
S C Ng  M Bina 《Journal of virology》1984,50(2):471-477
We examined the morphology, protein composition, and stability of the nucleoprotein complexes assembled in cells infected with simian virus 40 mutants belonging to the BC complementation group (tsBC11, tsBC208, tsBC214, tsB216, tsBC217, tsBC248, tsBC223, and tsBC274). We found that the 220S virions were not assembled in tsBC-infected cells under restrictive conditions. This block in assembly resulted in the accumulation of 75S chromatin in tsBC11-infected cells, as previously observed by Garber et al. (E.A. Garber, M.M. Seidman, and A.J. Levine, Virology 107:389-401, 1980). In cells infected with any other mutant listed above, the block in assembly resulted in the accumulation of 75S chromatin as well as nucleoprotein complexes sedimenting from 90 to 140S. Biochemical analysis revealed that these latter complexes contained the capsid proteins in addition to simian virus 40 DNA and the cellular core histones. Electron microscopic analysis clearly showed the association of the capsid proteins with the viral chromatin. Our results suggest that these proteins interact with simian virus 40 chromatin in the course of virion maturation and may thus play an active role in controlling simian virus 40 functions.  相似文献   

18.
We digested polyoma virus nucleoprotein complex, isolated from disrupted virions, with micrococcal nuclease and DNase I. The results were compared with digestions of chromatin from mouse nuclei. The nucleosome "core" structures were similar, but the spacing of the nucleosomes in the isolated polymoma nucleoprotein complexes was irregular, whereas in mouse chromatin it was regular. The average nucleosome repeat length in each case was 190 to 200 base pairs. This figure suggests that, unless there are substantial stretches of free DNA, the polyoma nucleoprotein complex contains about 26 nucleosomes. The commonly used method of preparing the nucleoprotein complex by disruption of virions at pH 10.2 may lead to significant damage to the structure. Such damage may be more clearly revealed by the susceptibility of the DNA to nuclease digestion than by the usual criteria of sedimentation velocity and buoyant density.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The simian virus 40 virion assembly process was studied with pulse-labeling kinetics of virion proteins, CsCl gradient analysis, electron microscopy, and low-salt gel electrophoresis. The results obtained are consistent with the model of gradual addition and organization of capsid proteins around simian virus 40 chromatin. Empty virions, as observed in the CsCl gradient by previous workers, were found to be the dissociation product of immature virus. Histone H1 was found in simian virus 40 chromatin and virion assembly intermediates but not in the mature virion banding at 1.34 g/ml in the CsCl gradient.  相似文献   

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