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1.
We investigated the conformation of the X-linked mouse hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase gene (HPRT) promoter region both in chromatin from the active and inactive X chromosomes with DNase I and in naked supercoiled DNA with S1 nuclease. A direct comparison of the chromatin structures of the active and inactive mouse HPRT promoter regions was performed by simultaneous DNase I treatment of the active and inactive X chromosomes in the nucleus of interspecies hybrid cells from Mus musculus and Mus caroli. Using a restriction fragment length polymorphism to distinguish between the active and inactive HPRT promoters, we found a small but very distinct difference in the DNase I sensitivity of active versus inactive chromatin. We also observed a single DNase I-hypersensitive site in the immediate area of the promoter which was present only on the active X chromosome. Analysis of the promoter region by S1 nuclease digestion of supercoiled plasmid DNA showed an S1-sensitive site which maps adjacent to or within the DNase I-hypersensitive site found in chromatin but upstream of the region minimally required for normal HPRT gene expression.  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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M Lundell  H G Martinson 《Biochemistry》1989,28(25):9757-9765
Active genes in higher eukaryotes reside in chromosomal domains which are more sensitive to digestion by DNase I than the surrounding inactive chromatin. Although it is widely assumed that some modification of higher order structure is important to the preferential DNase I sensitivity of active chromatin, this has so far not been tested. Here we show that the structural distinction between DNase I sensitive and resistant chromatin is remarkably stable to digestion by trypsin. Chick embryonic red blood cell nuclei were subjected to increasing levels of trypsin digestion and then assayed in the following three ways: (1) by gel electrophoresis for histone cleavage, (2) by sedimentation and nuclease digestion for loss of higher order structure, and (3) by dot-blot hybridization to globin and ovalbumin probes for disappearance of preferential DNase I sensitivity. We have found that chromatin higher order structure is lost concomitantly with the cleavage of histones H1, H5, and H3. In contrast, the preferential sensitivity of the globin domain to DNase I persists until much higher concentrations of trypsin, and indeed is not completely abolished even by the highest levels of trypsin we have used. We therefore conclude that the structural distinction of active chromatin, recognized by DNase I, does not reside at the level of higher order structure.  相似文献   

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The chromatin structure of the Xenopus oocyte-specific 5S rRNA genes was examined at high resolution in immature oocyte and somatic cell chromosomes by DNase I footprinting. On oocyte chromatin, where the genes are active, the cleavage preferences over the entire gene region showed a periodic pattern of sensitivity and were dramatically different from the patterns obtained with deproteinized DNA or somatic cell chromatin. Further, the normal binding site for TFIIIA over the internal promoter region was preferentially sensitive to cleavage, indicating that TFIIIA was not bound in the manner predicted by in vitro experiments. In somatic cell chromatin, the oocyte-type 5S genes displayed a cleavage pattern largely similar to deproteinized DNA suggesting the absence of positioned nucleosomes on these inactive genes, although the presence of uncharacterized repressor complexes could not be ruled out. These data are discussed in terms of potential forms of the chromatin structure and alternative mechanisms of oocyte-type gene activation.  相似文献   

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M J Scott  M J Tsai  B W O'Malley 《Biochemistry》1987,26(21):6831-6840
The location of CR1 middle repetitive sequences within or near the boundaries of the ovalbumin DNase I sensitive domain has suggested that CR1 sequences may play a role in defining transition regions of DNase I sensitivity in hen oviduct nuclei. We have examined this apparent relationship of CR1 sequences and transitions of chromatin structure by determining the DNase I sensitivity in oviduct nuclei of a 47-kilobase region that contains five CR1 sequences and the transcribed ovomucoid and ovoinhibitor genes. We find that three of the CR1 sequences occur within a broad transition region of decreasing DNase I sensitivity downstream of the ovomucoid gene. Another CR1 is in a region of decreased DNase I sensitivity within the ovoinhibitor gene. The fifth CR1 sequence is in a DNase I sensitive region between the two genes but which is less sensitive to DNase I digestion than the region immediately upstream from the ovomucoid gene. Thus, the CR1 sequences occur within regions of reduced relative DNase I sensitivity, suggesting that CR1s could facilitate the formation of a chromatin conformation that is less sensitive to DNase I digestion. Unexpectedly, the noncoding strand of sequences within and immediately adjacent to the 5' end of the actively transcribed ovomucoid and ovalbumin genes was less sensitive to DNase I digestion than their respective coding strands.  相似文献   

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The disappearance of defined restriction fragments of the beta 1-globin, an albumin and the A1 vitellogenin gene was quantitated after DNase I digestion and expressed by a sensitivity factor defined by a mathematical model. Analysis of naked DNA showed that the gene fragments have similar but not identical sensitivity factors. DNase I digestion of chromatin revealed for the same gene fragments sensitivity factors differing over a much wilder range. This is correlated to the activity of the genes analyzed: the beta 1-globin gene fragment is more sensitive to DNase I in chromatin of erythrocytes compared to hepatocytes whereas the albumin gene fragment is more sensitive to DNase I in chromatin of hepatocytes. The A1 vitellogenin gene has the same DNase I sensitivity in both cell types. Comparing the DNase I sensitivity of the three genes in their inactive state we suggest that different chromatin conformations may exist for inactive genes.  相似文献   

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The coding sequences of the yeast 35S rDNA gene and of the yeast galactokinase gene both show clear staphylococcal nuclease nucleosome profiles under conditions in which the gene is inactive (galactokinase) or less active (rDNA). Under conditions of more active expression, the galactokinase gene shows marked smearing in the digestion profiles. The rDNA gene shows a qualitatively similar change in digestion patterns. There is a typical nucleosomal DNase I ladder on the coding sequences of both genes, regardless of the state of activity. In contrast to the coding sequences, the rDNA upstream region chromatin shows a nonnucleosomal profile. The nonnucleosomal character is more pronounced when the gene is more active. On the galactokinase upstream region chromatin, there is a nucleosomal structure, with some minor modifications, when the gene is inactive and a clear nonnucleosomal structure when the gene is expressed.  相似文献   

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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   

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Nick-translation using mild digestion with DNase I allows preferential labeling of actively transcribing or potentially active genes, as compared with inactive genes. We have adapted this method to the level of electron microscopy to see the DNase I-sensitive regions in situ in Ehrlich tumor cells. In interphase cells treated with very low concentrations of DNase I, labeled sequences are found at the borders and in the close vicinity of condensed chromatin blocks. Labeling of condensed areas of chromatin requires higher DNase I concentrations and longer incubation in the nick-translation medium. In the nucleolus, the first sites to be nick-translated are the fibrillar centers and the interstices surrounding them, whereas the dense fibrillar component never contains labeled sequences. When cells are pretreated with actinomycin D, only a few perinucleolar clumps of condensed chromatin are labeled under the same conditions. This method provides a new tool for studying the functional organization of chromatin within a cell. The precise location of nick-translated sites in nucleolar components observed could change classical views concerning the functional organization of the nucleolus.  相似文献   

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DNase I sensitivity in facultative and constitutive heterochromatin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In situ nick translation allows the detection of DNase I sensitive and insensitive regions in fixed mammalian mitotic chromosomes. We have determined the difference in DNase I sensitivity between the active and inactive X chromosomes inMicrotus agrestis (rodent) cells, along both their euchromatic and constitutive heterochromatic regions. In addition, we analysed the DNase I sensitivity of the constitutive heterochromatic regions in mouse chromosomes. InMicrotus agrestis female cells the active X chromosome is sensitive to DNase I along its euchromatic region while the inactive X chromosome is insensitive except for an early replicating region at its distal end. The late replicating constitutive heterochromatic regions, however, in both the active and inactive X chromosome are sensitive to DNase I. In mouse cells on the other hand, the constitutive heterochromatin is insensitive to DNase I both in mitotic chromosomes and interphase nuclei.  相似文献   

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