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1.
Although the crystal structure of nucleosome core particle is essentially symmetrical in the vicinity of the dyad, the linker histone binds asymmetrically in this region to select a single high-affinity site from potentially two equivalent sites. To try to resolve this apparent paradox we mapped to base-pair resolution the dyads and rotational settings of nucleosome core particles reassembled on synthetic tandemly repeating 20 bp DNA sequences. In agreement with previous observations, we observed (1) that the helical repeat on each side of the dyad cluster is 10 bp maintaining register with the sequence repeat and (2) that this register changes by 2 bp in the vicinity of the dyad. The additional 2 bp required to effect the change in the rotational settings is accommodated by an adjustment immediately adjacent to the dyad. At the dyad the hydroxyl radical cleavage is asymmetric and we suggest that the inferred structural asymmetry could direct the binding of the linker histone to a single preferred site.  相似文献   

2.
The precise positioning of nucleosomes plays a critical role in the regulation of gene expression by modulating the DNA binding activity of trans-acting factors. However, molecular determinants responsible for positioning are not well understood. We examined whether the removal of the core histone tail domains from nucleosomes reconstituted with specific DNA fragments led to alteration of translational positions. Remarkably, we find that removal of tail domains from a nucleosome assembled on a DNA fragment containing a Xenopus borealis somatic-type 5S RNA gene results in repositioning of nucleosomes along the DNA, including two related major translational positions that move about 20 bp further upstream with respect to the 5S gene. In a nucleosome reconstituted with a DNA fragment containing the promoter of a Drosophila alcohol dehydrogenase gene, several translational positions shifted by about 10 bp along the DNA upon tail removal. However, the positions of nucleosomes assembled with a DNA fragment known to have one of the highest binding affinities for core histone proteins in the mouse genome were not altered by removal of core histone tail domains. Our data support the notion that the basic tail domains bind to nucleosomal DNA and influence the selection of the translational position of nucleosomes and that once tails are removed movement between translational positions occurs in a facile manner on some sequences. However, the effect of the N-terminal tails on the positioning and movement of a nucleosome appears to be dependent on the DNA sequence such that the contribution of the tails can be masked by very high affinity DNA sequences. Our results suggest a mechanism whereby sequence-dependent nucleosome positioning can be specifically altered by regulated changes in histone tail-DNA interactions in chromatin.  相似文献   

3.
A 145-bp DNA sequence, cloned from Escherichia coli, was reconstituted into nucleosome core particles by a number of methods. The behaviour of the resulting complex upon sucrose gradient sedimentation and nucleoprotein gel electrophoresis closely resembled that of control bulk nucleosome core particles. DNase I digestion of the 32P-end-labelled complex revealed the 10-bp periodicity of cleavages expected for DNA bound on a histone surface. The narrow cleavage sites observed (1 bp wide) imply that the sequence occupies a single preferred position on the nucleosome core, accurate to the level of single base pairs. By relating the digestion pattern observed to the pattern of site protection found for random sequence nucleosomes, the DNA position was found to be offset by 17 bp from that in the normal core particle. A number of experiments argue against the involvement of length or end effects and suggest that it is some feature of the DNA sequence itself that determines this precise positioning of DNA on the nucleosome.  相似文献   

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7.
The roles and interdependence of DNA sequence and archaeal histone fold structure in determining archaeal nucleosome stability and positioning have been determined and quantitated. The presence of four tandem copies of TTTAAAGCCG in the polylinker region of pLITMUS28 resulted in a DNA molecule with increased affinity (DeltaDeltaG of approximately 700 cal mol(-1)) for the archaeal histone HMfB relative to the polylinker sequence, and the dominant, quantitative contribution of the helical repeats of the dinucleotide TA to this increased affinity has been established. The rotational and translational positioning of archaeal nucleosomes assembled on the (TTTAAAGCCG)(4) sequence and on DNA molecules selectively incorporated into archaeal nucleosomes by HMfB have been determined. Alternating A/T- and G/C-rich regions were located where the minor and major grooves, respectively, sequentially faced the archaeal nucleosome core, and identical positioning results were obtained using HMfA, a closely related archaeal histone also from Methanothermus fervidus. However, HMfA did not have similarly high affinities for the HMfB-selected DNA molecules, and domain-swap experiments have shown that this difference in affinity is determined by residue differences in the C-terminal region of alpha-helix 3 of the histone fold, a region that is not expected to directly interact with DNA. Rather this region is thought to participate in forming the histone dimer:dimer interface at the center of an archaeal nucleosome histone tetramer core. If differences in this interface do result in archaeal histone cores with different sequence preferences, then the assembly of alternative archaeal nucleosome tetramer cores could provide an unanticipated and novel structural mechanism to regulate gene expression.  相似文献   

8.
S Tanaka  M Zatchej    F Thoma 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(3):1187-1193
DNA sequences that support bending around the histone octamer ('rotational setting') are considered to be a major determinant of nucleosome positions. TG5 is an artificial positioning sequence containing 100 bp of an (A/T)3NN(G/C)3NN motif repeated with a 10 bp period. It provides a strong rotational setting and is superior to natural sequences in nucleosome formation in vitro [Shrader, T.E. and Crothers, D.M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 86, 7418-7422]. To investigate the contribution of the rotational setting to nucleosome positioning in vivo, TG sequences were inserted in a nucleosome, at the edge of a nucleosome and in a nuclease sensitive region of yeast minichromosomes and the chromatin structures were analysed. In none of the constructs were TG sequences folded in a positioned nucleosome, demonstrating that the rotational setting played a subordinate role in the rough positioning in vivo. The rotational setting might fine tune the positions. Positioned nucleosomes were found overlapping the ends of TG, indicating that a discontinuity of the 10 bp periodicity of (A/T)3 and (G/C)3 near the centre of a nucleosome might be favourable for positioning and serve as a translational signal.  相似文献   

9.
In a previous report we constructed a synthetic DNA sequence that directed the deposition of histone octamers to a single site, and it was proposed that DNA distortion was involved in the positioning effect. In the present study we utilized the chemical probe potassium permanganate to identify sites of DNA distortion in the synthetic positioning sequence. A permanganate hypersite was identified 15 bp from the nucleosome pseudo-dyad at a site known to display DNA distortion in the mature nucleosome. The sequence of the site contained a TA step flanked by an oligo-pyrimidine tract. A series of substitutions were made in the region of the permanganate hypersite and the resulting constructs tested for affinity for histone octamers and translational positioning in in vitro studies. The results revealed that either a single base substitution at the TA step or in the adjacent homopolymeric tract dramatically affected affinity and positioning activity. The rotational orientation of the permanganate-sensitive sequence was shown to be important for functions, since altering the orientation of the site in a positioning fragment reduced positioning activity and octamer affinity, while altering the rotational orientation of the sequence in a non-positioning fragment had the opposite effects. A reconstituted 5 S rDNA positioning sequence from Lytechinus variegatus was also shown to display a permanganate hypersite 16 bp from its pseudo-dyad.  相似文献   

10.
The human centromere proteins A (CENP-A) and B (CENP-B) are the fundamental centromere components of chromosomes. CENP-A is the centromere-specific histone H3 variant, and CENP-B specifically binds a 17-base pair sequence (the CENP-B box), which appears within every other alpha-satellite DNA repeat. In the present study, we demonstrated centromere-specific nucleosome formation in vitro with recombinant proteins, including histones H2A, H2B, H4, CENP-A, and the DNA-binding domain of CENP-B. The CENP-A nucleosome wraps 147 base pairs of the alpha-satellite sequence within its nucleosome core particle, like the canonical H3 nucleosome. Surprisingly, CENP-B binds to nucleosomal DNA when the CENP-B box is wrapped within the nucleosome core particle and induces translational positioning of the nucleosome without affecting its rotational setting. This CENP-B-induced translational positioning only occurs when the CENP-B box sequence is settled in the proper rotational setting with respect to the histone octamer surface. Therefore, CENP-B may be a determinant for translational positioning of the centromere-specific nucleosomes through its binding to the nucleosomal CENP-B box.  相似文献   

11.
A DNA fragment of 163 bp containing 11 GGA repeats formed two-end positioned mononucleosomes as efficiently as that of CTG repeats. However, the rotational positioning of the GGA fragment was weak because clear DNase I cleavage patterns with 10-base periodicity were not seen near the center of the GGA fragment but were detected in the entire region of the CTG fragment. Incubation of the GGA mononucleosomes with the same fragment provided the DNA-DNA complex, which had been shown by using naked DNA fragments. DNase I digestion of the complex exhibited protection in the GGA repeats and in flanking sequences of about 30 bp at both sides, suggesting that both the repeat and flanking regions were involved in the association. Interestingly, histone H1, which enhanced DNA-DNA association on naked DNA, did not affect the complex formation on mononucleosomes. These results imply that GGA microsatellites in genomes could associate with one another at multiple sites and that the association may play a role in functional organization of higher order chromatin architecture.  相似文献   

12.
Transposon Tn903 contains the APH gene for kanamycin resistance, which is active in yeast [A. Jiménez and J. Davies (1980) Nature (London) 287, 869-871] and is flanked by two inverted repeats (IR) 1057 bp long. When plasmid pAJ50, carrying Tn903 and the 2-microns circle origin of replication, is cloned into Saccharomyces cerevisiae, nucleosomes are assembled in vivo on the prokaryotic DNA of the transposon. Indirect end labeling revealed that three nucleosomes are preferentially positioned on symmetrical sequences from both IRs. DNase I digestion also confirmed that the chromatin structure is symmetrical in both IRs. This suggests that sequence determinants are decisive for chromatin structure in these regions. We have calculated the rotational and translational fits [H. R. Drew and C. R. Calladine (1987) J. Mol. Biol. 195, 143-173] for the Tn903 sequence and the results indicate that the nucleosome positioning on the IRs is sequence-directed. Nucleosome deposition on the APH gene also occurs, but no clear positioning exists. Some sequence preference for positioning nucleosomes on the promoter can be predicted, especially from the translational fit. Experimental data indicate, however, that nucleosomes are absent from the promoter. Therefore, chromatin can be organized on prokaryotic DNA in a manner that resembles the typical eukaryotic chromatin structure.  相似文献   

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14.

Background  

The position of a nucleosome, both translational along the DNA molecule and rotational between the histone core and the DNA, is controlled by many factors, including the regular occurrence of specific dinucleotides with a period of approximately 10 bp, important for the rotational setting of the DNA around the histone octamer.  相似文献   

15.
DNA stretching in chromatin may facilitate its compaction and influence site recognition by nuclear factors. In vivo, stretching has been estimated to occur at the equivalent of one to two base-pairs (bp) per nucleosome. We have determined the crystal structure of a nucleosome core particle containing 145 bp of DNA (NCP145). Compared to the structure with 147 bp, the NCP145 displays two incidences of stretching one to two double-helical turns from the particle dyad axis. The stretching illustrates clearly a mechanism for shifting DNA position by displacement of a single base-pair while maintaining nearly identical histone-DNA interactions. Increased DNA twist localized to a short section between adjacent histone-DNA binding sites advances the rotational setting, while a translational component involves DNA kinking at a flanking region that initiates elongation by unstacking bases. Furthermore, one stretched region of the NCP145 displays an extraordinary 55° kink into the minor groove situated 1.5 double-helical turns from the particle dyad axis, a hot spot for gene insertion by HIV-integrase, which prefers highly distorted substrate. This suggests that nucleosome position and context within chromatin could promote extreme DNA kinking that may influence genomic processes.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Periodic spacing of A-tracts (short runs of A or T) with the DNA helical period of ~10?C11?bp is characteristic of intrinsically bent DNA. In eukaryotes, the DNA bending is related to chromatin structure and nucleosome positioning. However, the physiological role of strong sequence periodicity detected in many prokaryotic genomes is not clear.

Results

We developed measures of intensity and persistency of DNA curvature-related sequence periodicity and applied them to prokaryotic chromosomes and phages. The results indicate that strong periodic signals present in chromosomes are generally absent in phage genomes. Moreover, chromosomes containing prophages are less likely to possess a persistent periodic signal than chromosomes with no prophages.

Conclusions

Absence of DNA curvature-related sequence periodicity in phages could arise from constraints associated with DNA packaging in the viral capsid. Lack of prophages in chromosomes with persistent periodic signal suggests that the sequence periodicity and concomitant DNA curvature could play a role in protecting the chromosomes from integration of phage DNA.  相似文献   

17.
DNA in Methanothermus fervidus, a hyperthermophilic archaeon, is constrained into archaeal nucleosomes in vivo by the archaeal histones HMfA and HMfB. Here, we document the translational and rotational positioning of archaeal nucleosome assembly in vitro by a sequence from the 7S RNA encoding region of the M. fervidus genome. The minor groove of the DNA at the center of the DNA sequence, protected from micrococcal nuclease digestion by incorporation into a positioned archaeal nucleosome, faces away from the archaeal histone core.  相似文献   

18.
Sequence periodicities in chicken nucleosome core DNA   总被引:79,自引:0,他引:79  
The rotational positioning of DNA about the histone octamer appears to be determined by certain sequence-dependent modulations of DNA structure. To establish the detailed nature of these interactions, we have analysed the sequences of 177 different DNA molecules from chicken erythrocyte core particles. All variations in the sequence content of these molecules, which may be attributed to sequence-dependent preferences for DNA bending, correlate well with the detailed path of the DNA as it wraps around the histone octamer in the crystal structure of the nucleosome core. The sequence-dependent preferences that correlate most closely with the rotational orientation of the DNA, relative to the surface of the protein, are of two kinds: ApApA/TpTpT and ApApT/ApTpT, the minor grooves of which face predominantly in towards the protein; and also GpGpC/GpCpC and ApGpC/GpCpT, whose minor grooves face outward. Fourier analysis has been used to obtain fractional variations in occurrence for all ten dinucleotide and all 32 trinucleotide arrangements. These sequence preferences should apply generally to many other cases of protein-DNA recognition, where the DNA wraps around a protein. In addition, it is observed that long runs of homopolymer (dA) X (dT) prefer to occupy the ends of core DNA, five to six turns away from the dyad. These same sequences are apparently excluded from the near-centre of core DNA, two to three turns from the dyad. Hence, the translational positioning of any single histone octamer along a DNA molecule of defined sequence may be strongly influenced by the placement of (dA) X (dT) sequences. It may also be influenced by any aversion of the protein for sequences in the "linker" region, the sequence content of which remains to be determined.  相似文献   

19.
Previous experiments have shown that the locations of the histone octamer on DNA molecules of 140 to 240 base-pairs (bp) are influenced strongly by the nucleotide sequence. Here we have studied the locations of the histone octamer on a relatively long DNA molecule of 860 bp, using two different nucleases, micrococcal and DNAase I. Data were obtained from both the protein--DNA complexes and from the naked DNA at single-bond resolution, and then were analyzed by densitometry to yield plots of differential cleavage, which show clearly the changes in cutting due to the addition of protein. Our results show that the placement of core histones on the 860 bp molecule is definitely non-random. The digestion data provide evidence for five nucleosome cores, the centers of which lie in defined locations. In all but one of these protein--DNA complexes, the DNA adopts a unique, highly preferred rotational setting with respect to the protein surface. Another protein--DNA complex is unusual in that it protects 200 bp from digestion, yet is cut in its very center as if it were split into two parts. The apparent average twist of the DNA within all of these protein--DNA complexes is 10.2(+/- 0.1) bp, as measured by the periodicity of DNAase I digestion. This value is in excellent agreement with the twist of 10.21(+/- 0.05) bp deduced from the periodicity of sequence content in chicken nucleosome core DNA. In addition, we observe a discontinuity in the periodic cutting by DNAase I of about -1 to -3 bonds in going from any nucleosome core to the next. The most plausible interpretation of this discontinuity is that it reflects the angle by which adjacent protein--DNA complexes are aligned. Thus, any nucleosome may be related to its neighbor by a left-handed rotation in space of -1/10.2 to -3/10.2 helix turns, or -35 degrees to -105 degrees. Repeated many times, this operation would build a long, left-handed helix of nucleosomes similar to that described by many workers for the packing of nucleosomes in chromatin. In order to look for any long-range influences on the positioning of the histone octamer in the 860 bp molecule (as would be expected if the nucleosomes have to fit into some higher-order structure), we have examined the locations of the histone octamer on five different isolated short fragments of the 860-mer, all of nucleosomal length.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
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   

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