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1.
Structure of nucleosomes and organization of internucleosomal DNA in chromatin   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
We have compared the mononucleosomal pattern produced by micrococcal nuclease digestion of condensed and unfolded chromatin and chromatin in nuclei from various sources with the repeat length varying from 165 to 240 base-pairs (bp). Upon digestion of isolated H1-containing chromatin of every tested type in a low ionic strength solution (unfolded chromatin), a standard series of mononucleosomes (MN) was formed: the core particle, MN145, and H1-containing, MN165, MN175, MN185, MN195, MN205 and MN215 (the indexes give an approximate length of the nucleosomal DNA that differs in these particles by an integral number of 10 bp). In addition to the pattern of unfolded chromatin, digestion of whole nuclei or condensed chromatin (high ionic strength of Ca2+) gave rise to nuclei-specific, H1-lacking MN155. Digestion of H1-lacking chromatin produced only MN145, MN155 and MN165 particles, indicating that the histone octamer can organize up to 165 bp of nucleosomal DNA. Although digestion of isolated sea urchin sperm chromatin (repeat length of about 240 bp) at a low ionic strength gave a typical "unfolded chromatin pattern", digests of spermal nuclei contained primarily MN145, MN155, MN235 and MN245 particles. A linear arrangement of histones along DNA (primary organization) of the core particle was found to be preserved in the mononucleosomes, with the spacer DNA length from 10 to 90 bp on one (in MN155) or both sides of core DNA being a multiple of about 10 bp. In MN235, the core particle occupies preferentially a central position with the length of the spacer DNA on both sides of the core DNA being usually about 30 + 60 or 40 + 50 bp. Histone H1 is localized at the ends of these particles, i.e. close to the centre of the spacer DNA. The finding that globular part of histones H3 and sea urchin sperm H2B can covalently bind to spacer DNA suggests their involvement in the organization of chromatin superstructure. Our data indicate that decondensation of chromatin is accompanied by rearrangement of histone H1 on the spacer DNA sites adjacent to the core particle and thus support a solenoid model for the chromatin superstructure in nuclei in which the core DNA together with the spacer DNA form a continuous superhelix.  相似文献   

2.
The assembly of hybrid core particles onto long chicken DNA with histone H2B in the chicken histone octamer replaced with either wheat histone H2B(2) or sea urchin sperm histone H2B(1) or H2B(2) is described. All these histone H2B variants have N-terminal extensions of between 18 and 20 amino acids, although only those from sea urchin sperm have S(T)PXX motifs present. Whereas chicken histone octamers protected 167 base pairs (bp) (representing two full turns) of DNA against micrococcal nuclease digestion (Lindsey, G. G., Orgeig, S., Thompson, P., Davies, N., and Maeder, D. L. (1991) J. Mol. Biol. 218, 805-813), all the hybrid histone octamers protected an additional 17-bp DNA against nuclease digestion. This protection was more marked in the case of hybrid octamers containing sea urchin sperm histone H2B variants and similar to that described previously (Lindsey, G. G., Orgeig, S., Thompson, P., Davies, N., and Maeder, D. L. (1991) J. Mol. Biol. 218, 805-813) for hybrid histone octamers containing wheat histone H2A variants all of which also have S(T)PXX motifs present. Continued micrococcal nuclease digestion reduced the length of DNA associated with the core particle via 172-, 162-, and 152-bp intermediates until the 146-bp core particle was obtained. These DNA lengths were approximately 5 bp or half a helical turn longer than those reported previously for stripped chicken chromatin and for core particles containing histone octamers reconstituted using "normal" length histone H2B variants. This protection pattern was also found in stripped sea urchin sperm chromatin, demonstrating that the assembly/digestion methodology reflects the in vivo situation. The interaction between the N-terminal histone H2B extension and DNA of the "linker" region was confirmed by demonstrating that stripped sea urchin sperm chromatin precipitated between 120 and 500 mM NaCl in a manner analogous to unstripped chromatin whereas stripped chicken chromatin did not. Tryptic digestion to remove all the histone tails abolished this precipitation as well as the protection of DNA outside of the 167-bp core particle against nuclease digestion.  相似文献   

3.
We have digested chicken erythrocyte soluble chromatin, both unstripped and stripped of histones H1 and H5 with either 0.6 M NaCl or DNA-cellulose, with micrococcal nuclease (MNase). Digestion of unstripped chromatin to monomeric particles initially paused at 188 bp DNA; continued digestion resulted in another pause at 177 before the 167 bp chromatosome and 146 bp core particle were obtained. Digestion of stripped chromatin to monomeric particles paused transiently at 177 bp; continued digestion resulted in marked pauses at 167 and 156 before the 146 bp core particle was obtained. These results suggested that 167 bp DNA representing two complete turns are bound to the histone octamer. Histone H1/H5 binds an additional two helical turns of DNA, thereby protecting up to 188 bp DNA against nuclease digestion. Monomeric particles containing 167 bp DNA were isolated from stripped chromatin and found by DNase I digestion to be a homogeneous population with a 10 bp DNA extension to either end relative to the 146 bp core particle. Thermal denaturation and circular dichroism spectroscopy showed stronger histone-DNA interactions and increased DNA winding as the length of DNA attached to the core histone octamer was decreased. Thermal denaturation also showed three classes of histone-DNA interaction: the core particle containing 167 bp DNA had tight binding of ten helical turns of DNA, intermediate binding of two helical turns and looser binding of four helical turns.  相似文献   

4.
A series of mono- and dinucleosomal DNAs characterized by an about ten-base periodicity in the size were revealed in the micrococcal nuclease digests of Drosophila chromatin which have 180 +/- 5 base pair (bp) nucleosomal repeat. 20, 30, and 40 bp spacers were found to be predominant in chromatin by trimming DNA in dinucleosomes to the core position. Among several identified mononucleosomes (MN), MN170, MN180 and MN190 were isolated from different sources (the figures indicate the DNA length in bp). The presence of the 10, 20, and 30 bp long spacers was shown in these mononucleosomes by crosslinking experiments. The interaction of histone H3 with the spacer in the Drosophila MN180 particle was also shown by the crosslinking /5/. We conclude from these results that the 10 n bp long intercore DNA (n = 2, 3 and 4) is organized by histone H3, in particular, and together with the core DNA forms a continuous superhelix. Taken together, these data suggest that Drosophila chromatin consists of the regularly aligned and tightly packed MN180, as a repeating unit, containing 10 and 20 bp spacers at the ends of 180 bp DNA. Within the asymmetric and randomly oriented in chromatin MN180, the cores occupy two alternative positions spaced by 10 bp.  相似文献   

5.
Nucleosomes and subnucleosomes: heterogeneity and composition   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Previous studies (Varshavsky, Bakayev and Georgiev, 1976a) have shown that chromatin subunits (mononucleosomes) and their oligomers in a mild staphylococcal nuclease digest of chromatin display a heterogeneous content of histone H1. We now report that a mild staphylococcal nuclease digest of either chromatin or nuclei from mouse Ehrlich tumor cells contains mononucleosomes of three discrete kinds. The smallest mononucleosome (MN1) contains all histones except H1 and a DNA fragment 140 base pairs (bp) long. The intermediate mononucleosome (MN2) contains all five histones and a DNA fragment 170 bp long. The third mononucleosome (MN3) also contains all five histones, but its DNA fragment is longer and more heterogeneous in size (180–200 bp). Most of the MN3 particles are rapidly converted by nuclease into mononucleosomes MN1 and MN2 There exists, however, a relatively nuclease-resistant subpopulation of the MN3 mononucleosomes. These 200 bp MN1 particles contain not only histones but also nonhistone proteins, and are significantly more resistant to nuclease than the bulk of MN3 particles and the smaller mononucleosomes MN1 and MN2.There are eight major kinds of staphylococcal nuclease-produced soluble subnucleosomes (SN). The SN1 is a set of naked double-stranded DNA fragments ~20 bp long. The SN2 is a complex of a specific basic nonhistone protein (molecular weight ~16,000 daltons) and a DNA fragment ~27 bp long. The SN3 contains histone H4, the above-mentioned specific nonhistone protein and a DNA fragment ~27 bp long. The SN4 contains histones H2a, H2b, H4 and a DNA fragment ~45 bp long. The SN5 contains histones H2a, H2b, H3 and a DNA fragment ~55 bp long. The SN6 is a complex of histone H1 and a DNA fragment ~35 bp long. Subnucleosomes SN7 and SN8 each contain all the histones except H1, and DNA fragments ~100 and ~120 bp long, respectively.Nuclease digestion of isolated mono- or dinucleosomes does not produce some of the subnucleosomes. These and related findings indicate that the cleavage required to generate these subnucleosomes result from some aspect of chromatin structure which is lost upon digestion to mono- and dinucleosomes.  相似文献   

6.
The chromatin structure of morphologically-similar, but increasingly-malignant erythroleukemia cells was investigated using milk micrococcal nuclease digestion of isolated nuclei. The maximum solubilization of chromatin was unique for each of the three cell types: the least malignant (our Stage II) released 61% of its chromatin DNA, the most malignant (Stage IV), 46%, and the intermediate (Stage III) released 36%. An analysis of the nucleosome oligomers liberated by digestion also demonstrated differences. After 15 minutes of digestion when release was reaching its maximum, a greater proportion of large nucleosomal oligomers (sizes > trinucleosome) was released from Stage II nuclei than from Stage III or IV nuclei. The cell types also differed in the relative amount of H1-depleted mononucleosomes released. Analysis of the size of the double-stranded DNA associated with mononucleosomal particles showed that Stage III mononucleosomes were smaller (148 bp) than Stage IV (167 bp) or Stage II (190 bp). In addition, while the DNA of mononucleosomes depleted in H1 was smaller than that in the H1-containing species, relative size differences among the different cell types were retained. These data suggested that the difference in the mononuocleosome particle size resistant to nuclease digestion was independent of histone H1. Differences in nucleosome repeat length were also noted among the cell types. These studies have demonstrated dramatic differences in chromatin structure associated with malignant potential of an otherwise morphologically identical cell type. These findings may reflect changes in the relative amounts of H2a variants which we have previously described among the different malignant cell types.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Eukaryotic chromosomal DNA is assembled into regularly spaced nucleosomes, which play a central role in gene regulation by determining accessibility of control regions. The nucleosome contains ∼147 bp of DNA wrapped ∼1.7 times around a central core histone octamer. The linker histone, H1, binds both to the nucleosome, sealing the DNA coils, and to the linker DNA between nucleosomes, directing chromatin folding. Micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digests the linker to yield the chromatosome, containing H1 and ∼160 bp, and then converts it to a core particle, containing ∼147 bp and no H1. Sequencing of nucleosomal DNA obtained after MNase digestion (MNase-seq) generates genome-wide nucleosome maps that are important for understanding gene regulation. We present an improved MNase-seq method involving simultaneous digestion with exonuclease III, which removes linker DNA. Remarkably, we discovered two novel intermediate particles containing 154 or 161 bp, corresponding to 7 bp protruding from one or both sides of the nucleosome core. These particles are detected in yeast lacking H1 and in H1-depleted mouse chromatin. They can be reconstituted in vitro using purified core histones and DNA. We propose that these ‘proto-chromatosomes’ are fundamental chromatin subunits, which include the H1 binding site and influence nucleosome spacing independently of H1.  相似文献   

9.
The granular particles of chromatin peripheral layer, were isolated together, with the nuclear envelope by treatment of nuclei with nuclease. These particles differ from total chromatin by a decreased content of histone H1, a specific set of minor acid-soluble proteins and a low DNA methylation level. Taking account of the fact that these particles facilitate chromatin interaction with the nuclear envelope, the latter were termed as "anchorosomes". Using UV-induced cross-linking of DNA to the proteins, it was found that all anchorosome-specific acid-soluble proteins can directly interact with anchorosomal DNA. Treatment of anchorosomes with staphylococcal nuclease and electron microscopic data showed that anchorosomes have a nucleosomal organization. Five to ten per cent of anchorosomal DNA appear to be firmly bound to nuclear lamina. This DNA cannot be separated from the lamina by treatment with 2 M NaCl, 1% SDS or heparin (1 mg/ml). The bulk of DNA in the laminal fraction after treatment with the above reagents is protected from hydrolysis with DNAase I by anchorosomal proteins and thus has a high molecular weight (10,000-30,000 base pairs). After treatment of anchorosomes with 0.6 M or 2 M NaCl, DNAase I splits this DNA, predominantly to minor fragments.  相似文献   

10.
The contribution of the linker region to maintenance of condensed chromatin was examined in two model systems, namely sea urchin sperm nuclei and chicken red blood cell nuclei. Linkerless nuclei, prepared by extensive digestion with micrococcal nuclease, were compared with Native nuclei using several assays, including microscopic appearance, nuclear turbidity, salt stability, and trypsin resistance. Chromatin in the Linkerless nuclei was highly condensed, resembling pyknotic chromatin in apoptotic cells. Linkerless nuclei were more stable in low ionic strength buffers and more resistant to trypsin than Native nuclei. Analysis of histones from the trypsinized nuclei by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that specific histone H1, H2B, and H3 tail regions stabilized linker DNA in condensed nuclei. Thermal denaturation of soluble chromatin preparations from differentially trypsinized sperm nuclei demonstrated that the N-terminal regions of histones Sp H1, Sp H2B, and H3 bind tightly to linker DNA, causing it to denature at a high temperature. We conclude that linker DNA exerts a disruptive force on condensed chromatin structure which is counteracted by binding of specific histone tail regions to the linker DNA. The inherent instability of the linker region may be significant in all eukaryotic chromatins and may promote gene activation in living cells.  相似文献   

11.
The tetrameric (H3/H4)2 146 base pair (bp) DNA and hexameric (H3/H4)2(H2A/H2B)1 146 bp DNA subnucleosomal particles have been prepared by depletion of chicken erythrocyte core particles using 3 or 4 M urea, 250 mM sodium chloride, and a cation-exchange resin. The particles have been characterized by cross-linking and sedimentation equilibrium. The structures of the particles, particularly the tetrameric, have been studied by sedimentation velocity, low-angle neutron scattering, circular dichroism, optical melting, and nuclease digestion with DNase I, micrococcal nuclease, and exonuclease III. It is concluded that since the radius of gyration of the DNA in the tetramer particle and its maximum dimension are very close to those of the core particle, no expansion occurs on removal of all the H2A and H2B. Nuclease digestion results indicate that histones H3/H4 in the tetramer particle protect a total of 70 bp of DNA that are centrally located within the 146 bp. Within the 70 bp DNA length, the two terminal regions of 10 bp are, however, not strongly protected from digestion. The optical melting profile of both particles can be resolved into three components and is consistent with the model of histone protection of DNA proposed from nuclease digestion. The structure proposed for the tetrameric histone complex bound to DNA is that of a compact particle containing 1.75 superhelical turns of DNA, in which the H3 and H4 histone location is the same as found for the core particle in chromatin by histone/DNA cross-linking [Shick, V. V., Belyavsky, A. V., Bavykin, S. G., & Mirzabekov, A. D. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 139, 491-517]. Optical melting of the hexamer particle shows that each (H2A/H2B)1 dimer of the core particle protects about 22 base pairs of DNA.  相似文献   

12.
Peripheral chromatin granules bound to the nuclear envelope of rat liver nuclei have been further investigated. Judging by the results of Staphylococcal nuclease digestion of nuclei and electron microscopical observations, the peripheral granules have nucleosomal organization. As shown by ultraviolet radiation DNA-protein cross-linkage, the histone-like proteins present in the peripheral chromatin instead of histone H1 (Fais et al., 1982) are in close contact with DNA. The peripheral chromatin contains a DNA firmly bound to the lamina. This DNA, resistant to extraction in high salt, heparin and SDS, is protected against a DNase attack since, as shown by DNA electrophoresis data, high molecular weight molecules (up to 20 kbas) are still present in the lamina residue. However, the high molecular weight DNA disappeared if the nuclear envelope fraction was again DNase-digested after high salt treatment. Altogether, the data of the previous (Fais et al., 1982; Prusov et al., 1980: Prusov et al., 1982) and the present investigations demonstrate that the peripheral chromatin granules are endowed with properties which distinguish them from the bulk chromatin and account for the chromosome bond to the nuclear envelope during interphase. This is why we suggest the term "anchorosome" for the peripheral protein granule attached to the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

13.
Chromatin in isolated rat liver nuclei was compared with chromatin in (i) nuclei depleted of H1 by acid extraction; (ii) nuclei treated at pH 3.2 (without removal of H1), and (iii) depleted nuclei following reassociation of H1. Electron microscopy and digestion by DNase I, micrococcal nuclease and endogenous Ca/Mg endonuclease were used for this comparative examination. Electron micrographs of H1-depleted nuclei showed a dispersed and finely granular appearance. The rate of DNA cleavage by micrococcal nuclease or DNase I was increased several-fold after H1 removal. Discretely sized intermediate particles produced by Ca/Mg endonuclease in native nuclei were not observed in digests of depleted nuclei. Digestion by micrococcal nuclease to chromatin particles soluble in 60 mM NaCl buffer appeared not to be affected in depleted nuclei. When nuclei were treated at pH 3.2, neither the appearance of chromatin in electron micrographs nor the mode or rate of nuclease digestion changed appreciably. Following reassociation of H1 to depleted nuclei, electron micrographs demonstrated the reformation of compacted chromatin, but the lower rate of DNA cleavage in native nuclei was not restored. Further, H1 reassociation produced a significant decrease in the solubility of nuclear chromatin cleaved by micrococcal nuclease or Ca/Mg endonuclease. In order to evaluate critically the reconstitution of native chromatin from H1-depleted chromatin we propose the use of digestion by a variety of nucleases in addition to an electron microscopic examination.  相似文献   

14.
DNA-protein binding in interphase chromosomes   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The metachromatic dye, azure B, was analyzed by microspectrophotometry when bound to DNA fibers and DNA in nuclei with condensed and dispersed chromatin. The interaction of DNA and protein was inferred from the amount of metachromasy (increased β/α-peak) of azure B that resulted after specific removal of various protein fractions. Dye bound to DNA-histone fibers and frog liver nuclei fixed by freeze-methanol substitution shows orthochromatic, blue-green staining under specific staining conditions, while metachromasy (blue or purple color) results from staining DNA fibers without histone or tissue nuclei after protein removal. The dispersed chromatin of hepatocytes was compared to the condensed chromatin of erythrocytes to see whether there were differences in DNA-protein binding in "active" and "inactive" nuclei. Extraction of histones with 0.02 N HCl, acidified alcohol, perchloric acid, and trypsin digestion all resulted in increased dye binding. The amount of metachromasy varied, however; removal of "lysine-rich" histone (extractable with 0.02 N HCl) caused a blue color, and a purplish-red color (µ-peak absorption) resulted from prolonged trypsin digestion. In all cases, the condensed and the dispersed chromatin behaved in the same way, indicating the similarity of protein bound to DNA in condensed and dispersed chromatin. The results appear to indicate that "lysine-rich" histone is bound to adjacent anionic sites of a DNA molecule and that nonhistone protein is located between adjacent DNA molecules in both condensed and dispersed chromatin.  相似文献   

15.
We have followed the kinetics of staphylococcal nuclease digestion of duck reticulocyte nuclei and chromatin from early stages to the digestion limit. We confirm that partial digestion of nuclei produces discrete DNA bands which are multiples of a monomer, 185 base pairs in length. The multimers are shown to be precursors of the monomer, which is next digested to a homogeneous, 140 base pair fragment. This fragment in turn gives rise to an array of nuclear limit digest DNA bands, which is almost identical with the limit digest pattern of isolated chromatin. As in the case of chromatin, half the DNA of nuclei is acid soluble at this limit. While the DNA limit digest patterns of nuclei and chromatin are similar, the large multimeric structures present as intermediates in nuclear digestion are absent in chromatin digestion. Alternate methods of chromatin gel preparation appear to leave more of the higher order structure intact, as measured by the production of these multimeric bands. Our results are consistent with the "beads on a string" model of chromatin proposed by others.  相似文献   

16.
Micrococcal-nuclease digestion of rat liver nuclei selectively released mononucleosomes associated with ADP-ribosylated [Caplan, Ord & Stocken (1978) Biochem. J.174, 475-483] histone H1. Two classes of mononucleosome were detected, those that leaked out during digestion and those that were subsequently released by 5mm-sodium phosphate buffer (pH6.8)/0.2mm-NaEDTA. The former, from which histone H1 had been dissociated, contained 140-base-pair-length DNA and core histones;the latter contained core particles and mononucleosomes with histone H1 and 200-base-pair-length DNA. When normal liver nuclei were phosphorylated with [gamma-(32)P]ATP, dissociated histone H1, which could be separated from core particles with Sephadex G-200, showed (32)P uptake. (32)P uptake into histones H2A and poly(ADP-ribosyl)ated H3 was appreciable in core particles, but was less evident in nucleosomes still containing histone H1. When [(3)H]-thymidine was given to partially hepatectomized rats in S-phase, 5-10min pulses in animals of over 300g body wt. showed the presence of high-specific-radioactivity DNA in released core particles and mononucleosomes compared with DNA retained in the nuclear pellets. Mononucleosomes from rat livers in S-phase with new, [(3)H]lysine-containing histones, had higher (32)P incorporation in histones H1 and their core histones, than for di- or tri-nucleosomes. Thermal-denaturation properties of control and phosphorylated mononucleosomes and core particles were very similar; removal of histone H1 and non-histone chromosomal proteins in 0.5m-NaCl markedly increased the proportion of DNA ;melting' below 70 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Mononucleosomes were released from both isolated mammalian (hog thyroid) and protozoan (Tetrahymena) nuclei by the bleomycin-induced DNA-strand breaking reaction. Trout sperm nuclei, on the other hand, were protected from the bleomycin-mediated DNA degradation. The mononucleosomes released from the bleomycin-treated nuclei contained the core histones H2A, H2B, H3, and H4; while HMG1 and HMG2 proteins, in addition to the core histones, were detected in the mononucleosomes obtained by micrococcal nuclease digestion of nuclei. HMGs, but not H1 histone, were dissociated into the supernatant by cleavage of chromatin DNA with bleomycin, whereas both HMGs and H1 were found in that fraction by digestion of nuclei with micrococcal nuclease. HMG1 and HMG2 were exclusively dissociated from chromatin with 1 mM bleomycin under the solvent condition where the DNA strand-breaking activity of the drug is repressed. These observations suggest the possibility that bleomycin preferentially binds to linker DNA regions not occupied by H1 histone in chromatin and exclusively dissociates HMG proteins and breaks the DNA strand. The results of the effects on bleomycin-induced DNA cleavage of nuclei of various drugs including polyamines, chelating agents, intercalating antibiotics such as mitomycin C or adriamycin, and radical scavengers are also presented.  相似文献   

19.
Previous reports have demonstrated that neuronal nuclei of rabbit, mouse and rat cerebral hemispheres exhibit a short DNA repeat length of 160 bp compared to the more typical repeat size of 200 bp found in glial nuclei and other cell types of higher eukaryotes. In this study we report that the conversion of chromatin to a short DNA repeat length in rat cerebral hemisphere neurons is a gradual process which begins between the first and second day after birth and is complete by 8 days. In these neurons, histone H1 appears to be less accessible to degradation by trypsin in the newborn rat brain compared to the 8 day old rat. This suggests that the developmental shift to a short DNA repeat length may be accompanied by a dispersal or decondensation of neuronal chromatin which results in an increased accessibility of neuronal histone H1 to degradation by trypsin. The increase in nuclear DNA content to 3.5C which has been reported in rat cortical neurons during early postnatal development does not appear to be associated with a selective amplification of a subset of DNA sequences as determined by DNA reassociation kinetics.  相似文献   

20.
B H Long  C Y Huang  A O Pogo 《Cell》1979,18(4):1079-1090
Nuclear matrices from undifferentiated and differentiated Friend erythroleukemia cells have been obtained by a method which removes DNA in a physiological buffer. These matrices preserved the characteristic topographical distribution of condensed and diffuse "chromatin" regions, as do nuclei in situ or isolated nuclei. Histone H1 was released from the nuclear matrix of undifferentiated cells by 0.3 M KCl; inner core histones were released by 1 M KCl. Nuclear matrix from differentiated cells did not maintain H1, and histone cores were fully released in 0.7 M KCl. KCl removed the core histones as an octameric structure with no evidence of preferential release of any single histone. Electron microscopy of KCl-treated matrix revealed no condensed regions but rather a network of fibrils in the whole DNA-depleted nuclei. When nuclear matrices from both types of cell were exposed to conditions of very low ionic strength, inner core histones and condensed regions remained. These observations support the contention that inner core histones are bound to matrix through natural ionic bonds or saline-labile elements, and that these interactions are implicated in chromatin condensation. hnRNA remained undegraded and tenaciously associated to the matrix fibrils, and was released only by chemical means which, by breaking hydrophobic and hydrogen bonds, produced matrix lysis. Very few nonhistone proteins were released upon complete digestion of DNA from either type of nuclei. The remaining nonhistone proteins represent a large number of species of which the majority may be matrix components. The molecular architecture in both condensed and diffuse regions of interphase nuclei appears to be constructed of two distinct kinds of fibers; the thicker chromatin fibers are interwoven with the thinner matrix fibers. The latter are formed by a heteropolymer of many different proteins.  相似文献   

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