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Three classes of chicken erythrocyte chromatin particles differing in their content of lysine-rich histones and/or spacer DNA have been studied in order to determine their ability to aggregate into complexes resembling those observed in native chromatin. The complexes have been obtained in the presence of MgCl2 and NaCl and studied by electron microscopy. Mononucleosomes, containing spacer DNA and histones H1 and H5, give rise to thick (about 70 nm) ellipsoidal particles in the presence of 0.5 mM MgCl2. These particles are disrupted by the addition of small amounts of NaCl (5–20 mM). On the other hand in 0.5 mM MgCl2 dinucleosomes give rise to regular fibrous complexes of about 40 nm in diameter which are very similar to native chromatin fibers. These complexes are much more stable when NaCl is added. We conclude that for the stability of nucleosomal aggregates, similar to native chromatin fibers, a continuity of DNA structure is not required, but the presence of divalent cations, spacer DNA and lysine-rich histones is essential.  相似文献   

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The existence of a 30‐nm fiber as a basic folding unit for DNA packaging has remained a topic of active discussion. Here, we characterize the supramolecular structures formed by reversible Mg2+‐dependent self‐association of linear 12‐mer nucleosomal arrays using microscopy and physicochemical approaches. These reconstituted chromatin structures, which we call “oligomers”, are globular throughout all stages of cooperative assembly and range in size from ~50 nm to a maximum diameter of ~1,000 nm. The nucleosomal arrays were packaged within the oligomers as interdigitated 10‐nm fibers, rather than folded 30‐nm structures. Linker DNA was freely accessible to micrococcal nuclease, although the oligomers remained partially intact after linker DNA digestion. The organization of chromosomal fibers in human nuclei in situ was stabilized by 1 mM MgCl2, but became disrupted in the absence of MgCl2, conditions that also dissociated the oligomers in vitro. These results indicate that a 10‐nm array of nucleosomes has the intrinsic ability to self‐assemble into large chromatin globules stabilized by nucleosome–nucleosome interactions, and suggest that the oligomers are a good in vitro model for investigating the structure and organization of interphase chromosomes.  相似文献   

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Multiscale modeling of nucleosome dynamics   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Nucleosomes form the fundamental building blocks of chromatin. Subtle modifications of the constituent histone tails mediate chromatin stability and regulate gene expression. For this reason, it is important to understand structural dynamics of nucleosomes at atomic levels. We report a novel multiscale model of the fundamental chromatin unit, a nucleosome, using a simplified model for rapid discrete molecular dynamics simulations and an all-atom model for detailed structural investigation. Using a simplified structural model, we perform equilibrium simulations of a single nucleosome at various temperatures. We further reconstruct all-atom nucleosome structures from simulation trajectories. We find that histone tails bind to nucleosomal DNA via strong salt-bridge interactions over a wide range of temperatures, suggesting a mechanism of chromatin structural organization whereby histone tails regulate inter- and intranucleosomal assemblies via binding with nucleosomal DNA. We identify specific regions of the histone core H2A/H2B-H4/H3-H3/H4-H2B/H2A, termed “cold sites”, which retain a significant fraction of contacts with adjoining residues throughout the simulation, indicating their functional role in nucleosome organization. Cold sites are clustered around H3-H3, H2A-H4 and H4-H2A interhistone interfaces, indicating the necessity of these contacts for nucleosome stability. Essential dynamics analysis of simulation trajectories shows that bending across the H3-H3 is a prominent mode of intranucleosomal dynamics. We postulate that effects of salts on mononucleosomes can be modeled in discrete molecular dynamics by modulating histone-DNA interaction potentials. Local fluctuations in nucleosomal DNA vary significantly along the DNA sequence, suggesting that only a fraction of histone-DNA contacts make strong interactions dominating mononucleosomal dynamics. Our findings suggest that histone tails have a direct functional role in stabilizing higher-order chromatin structure, mediated by salt-bridge interactions with adjacent DNA.  相似文献   

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Hyperacetylated chromatin was isolated from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells grown in n-butyrate containing medium and fractionated by mild digestion with deoxyribonuclease II and precipitation with MgCl2. The most highly acetylated forms of histones H4 and H3 as well as the acetylated subspecies of H2B were found almost entirely associated with the putatively active Mg2+-soluble chromatin fraction. The Mg2+-insoluble fraction contained mainly mono- and diacetylated molecules of H4 and H3.  相似文献   

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We describe the cloning and analysis of Drosophila nucleosome assembly protein 1 (dNAP-1), a core histone-binding protein that functions with other chromatin assembly activities in a Drosophila chromatin assembly factor 1-containing fraction (dCAF-1 fraction) in the ATP-facilitated assembly of regularly spaced nucleosomal arrays from purified core histones and DNA. Purified, recombinant dNAP-1 acts cooperatively with a factor(s) in the dCAF-1 fraction in the efficient and DNA replication-independent assembly of chromatin. In the presence of histone H1, the repeat length of the chromatin is similar to that of native chromatin from Drosophila embryos. By coimmunoprecipitation analysis, dNAP-1 was found to be associated with histones H2A and H2B in a crude whole-embryo extract, which suggests that dNAP-1 is bound to the histones in vivo. Studies of the localization of dNAP-1 in the Drosophila embryo revealed that the factor is present in the nucleus during S phase and is predominantly cytoplasmic during G2 phase. These data suggest that NAP-1 acts as a core histone shuttle which delivers the histones from the cytoplasm to the chromatin assembly machinery in the nucleus. Thus, NAP-1 appears to be one component of a multifactor chromatin assembly machinery that mediates the ATP-facilitated assembly of regularly spaced nucleosomal arrays.  相似文献   

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Nucleoplasmin (NP), a histone chaperone, acts as a reservoir for histones H2A-H2B in Xenopus laevis eggs and can displace sperm nuclear basic proteins and linker histones from the chromatin fiber of sperm and quiescent somatic nuclei. NP has been proposed to mediate the dynamic exchange of histones during the expression of certain genes and assists the assembly of nucleosomes by modulating the interaction between histones and DNA. Here, solution structural models of full-length NP and NP complexes with the functionally distinct nucleosomal core and linker histones are presented for the first time, providing a picture of the physical interactions between the nucleosomal and linker histones with NP core and tail domains. Small-angle X-ray scattering and isothermal titration calorimetry reveal that NP pentamer can accommodate five histones, either H2A-H2B dimers or H5, and that NP core and tail domains are intimately involved in the association with histones. The analysis of the binding events, employing a site-specific cooperative model, reveals a negative cooperativity-based regulatory mechanism for the linker histone/nucleosomal histone exchange. The two histone types bind with drastically different intrinsic affinity, and the strongest affinity is observed for the NP variant that mimicks the hyperphosphorylated active protein. The different “affinity windows” for H5 and H2A-H2B might allow NP to fulfill its histone chaperone role, simultaneously acting as a reservoir for the core histones and a chromatin decondensing factor. Our data are compatible with the previously proposed model where NP facilitates nucleosome assembly by removing the linker histones and depositing H2A-H2B dimers onto DNA.  相似文献   

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Electron microscopic and biochemical studies demonstrate that the fundamental structure of chromatin depleted of lysine-rich histones is composed of a flexible chain of spherical particles (nucleosomes), about 125 Å in diameter, connected by DNA filaments. Such a chromatin preparation can be separated by centrifugation into two fractions which differ in the spacing of the nucleosomes. In one fraction almost all of the DNA is condensed in nucleosomes, while the other fraction contains long stretches of free DNA connecting regions where the nucleosomes are closely packed. The isolated nucleosomes contain about 200 base pairs of DNA and the four histones F2a1, F2a2, and F2b, and F3 in an overall histone/DNA ratio of 0.97. In such a structure the DNA is compacted slightly more than five times from its extended length. The same basic structure can be visualized in chromatin spilling out of lysed nuclei. However, in this latter case the nucleosomes are very closely packed, suggesting that histone F1 is involved in the superpacking of DNA in chromosomes and nuclei. The chromatin fiber appears to be a self-assembling structure, since the nucleosomal arrangement can be reconstituted in vitro from DNA and the four histones F2a1, F2a2, F2b and F3 only, irrespective of their cellular origin.  相似文献   

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Kerry S. Bloom  John Carbon 《Cell》1982,29(2):305-317
We have examined the chromatin structure of the centromere regions of chromosomes III and XI in yeast by using cloned functional centromere DNAs (CEN3 and CEN11) as labeled probes. When chromatin from isolated nuclei is digested with micrococcal nuclease and the resulting DNA fragments separated electrophoretically and blotted to nitrocellulose filters, the centromeric nucleosomal sub-units are resolved into significantly more distinct ladders than are those from the bulk of the chromatin. A discrete protected region of 220–250 bp of CEN sequence flanked by highly nuclease-sensitive sites was revealed by mapping the exact nuclease cleavage sites within the centromeric chromatin. On both sides of this protected region, highly phased and specific nuclease cutting sites exist at nucleosomal intervals (160 bp) for a total length of 12–15 nucleosomal subunits. The central protected region in the chromatin of both centromeres spans the 130 bp segment that exhibits the highest degree of sequence homology (71%) between functional CEN3 and CEN11 DNAs. This unique chromatin structure is maintained on CEN sequences introduced into yeast on autonomously replicating plasmids, but is not propagated through foreign DNA sequences flanking the inserted yeast DNA.  相似文献   

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The packaging of DNA into nucleosomes and the organisation into higher order structures of chromatin limits the access of sequence specific DNA binding factors to DNA. In cells, DNA methylation is preferentially occuring in the linker region of nucleosomes, suggesting a structural impact of chromatin on DNA methylation. These observations raise the question whether DNA methyltransferases are capable to recognize the nucleosomal substrates and to modify the packaged DNA. Here, we performed a detailed analysis of nucleosome binding and nucleosomal DNA methylation by the maintenance DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1. Our binding studies show that Dnmt1 has a DNA length sensing activity, binding cooperatively to DNA, and requiring a minimal DNA length of 20 bp. Dnmt1 needs linker DNA to bind to nucleosomes and most efficiently recognizes nucleosomes with symmetric DNA linkers. Footprinting experiments reveal that Dnmt1 binds to both DNA linkers exiting the nucleosome core. The binding pattern correlates with the efficient methylation of DNA linkers. However, the enzyme lacks the ability to methylate nucleosomal CpG sites on mononucleosomes and nucleosomal arrays, unless chromatin remodeling enzymes create a dynamic chromatin state. In addition, our results show that Dnmt1 functionally interacts with specific chromatin remodeling enzymes to enable complete methylation of hemi-methylated DNA in chromatin.  相似文献   

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Calf thymus nucleosomes containing H1 were treated with dichlorodiammineplatinum (DDP) at low binding ratios (r = 0.05–0.15). Change in the electrophoretic mobility of the extracted nucleosomal DNA was observed following treatment with cis-DDP and little change with trans-DDP. There was a decrease in the electrophoretic mobility of the nucleosomal DNA as well as obliteration of the nucleosomal repeat distance. The fluorescence intensity of terbium binding to the extracted DNA showed minimal change following drug treatment. However, the thermal melting behavior of the nucleosomal DNA was altered to a greater extent following cis-DDP treatment at 280 rather than 260 nm and a destabilization of the DNA helix was observed. These data suggest that in the whole nucleosome, cis-DDP produces greater structural effects on the packaged DNA than trans-DDP, although similar amounts of drug are bound with both isomers.  相似文献   

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A study of ultrathin sections of normal Chinese hamster cells and cells treated with decreasing concentrations of bivalent cations (Ca2+ and Mg2+) in situ revealed several discrete levels of compaction of DNA-nucleoprotein (DNP) fibrils in mitotic chromosomes and the chromatin of interphase nuclei. At concentrations ranging from 3 mM CaCl2 and 1 mM MgCl2 to ten times less, the chromosomes are found to contain fibrous elements (chromonemata) about 100 nm in diameter. As Ca2+ concentration is gradually decreased to 0.2–0.1 mM, the chromosomes decondense into a number of discrete chromatin structures, the chromomeres. As decondensation proceeds, these chromomeres acquire a rosettelike structure with DNP fibrils radiating from an electron-dense core. Upon complete decondensation of chromosomes, individual chromomeres persist only in the centromeric regions. The following levels of DNP compaction in mitotic chromosomes are suggested: a 10-nm nucleosomal fibril, a 25-nm nucleomeric fibril, and the chromonema, a fibrous structure, about 100 nm in diameter, composed of chromomeres. Interphase nuclei also contain structures which are morphologically similar to the chromomeres of mitotic chromosomes.  相似文献   

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Torsionally stressed DNA plays a critical role in genome organization and regulation. While the effects of torsional stresses on naked DNA have been well studied, little is known about how these stresses propagate within chromatin and affect its organization. Here we investigate the torsional behavior of nucleosome arrays by means of Brownian dynamics simulations of a coarse-grained model of chromatin. Our simulations reveal a strong dependence of the torsional response on the rotational phase angle Ψ0 between adjacent nucleosomes. Extreme values of Ψ0 lead to asymmetric, bell-shaped extension-rotation profiles with sharp maxima shifted toward positive or negative rotations, depending on the sign of Ψ0, and to fast, irregular propagation of DNA twist. In contrast, moderate Ψ0 yield more symmetric profiles with broad maxima and slow, uniform propagation of twist. The observed behavior is shown to arise from an interplay between nucleosomal transitions into states with crossed and open linker DNAs and global supercoiling of arrays into left- and right-handed coils, where Ψ0 serves to modulate the energy landscape of nucleosomal states. Our results also explain the torsional resilience of chromatin, reconcile differences between experimentally measured extension-rotation profiles, and suggest a role of torsional stresses in regulating chromatin assembly and organization.  相似文献   

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