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Title: Poly[d(A.T)] and other synthetic polydeoxynucleotides containing oligoadenosine tracts form nucleosomes easily. Author: Puhl HL, Gudibande SR, Behe MJ. Journal: J Mol Biol; 1991 Dec 20; 222(4):1149-60. PubMed ID: 1762148. Abstract: Synthetic double-stranded polydeoxynucleotides of the general form poly[d(AnT).d(ATn)], with n ranging from 3 to 11, have been synthesized. The conformation of the polymers was investigated by circular dichroism spectroscopy and the polymers were examined for their ability to form nucleosomes. Although spectra show that a circular dichroism band characteristic of poly[d(A.T)] appears in the polymer family for n greater than 7, we demonstrate that even polynucleotides with the longest tracts of contiguous adenosine bases (n = 11) are able to form nucleosomes when reconstituted using a histone exchange procedure. Thus resistance to nucleosome formation does not coincide with the appearance of features similar to that of poly[d(A.T)] over the bulk of the nucleosomal DNA. Furthermore, we show that an approximately 150 base-pair poly[d(A.T)] itself, long thought to be refractory to nucleosome formation, can assemble into such a protein-DNA complex when reconstituted by a low-salt exchange procedure. Competitive assays show that the homopolymer reconstitutes about as well as heterogeneous sequences DNA. Our work, therefore, suggests that highly adenosine-rich sequences in vivo apparently have a function that operates at a level other than that of nucleosome structure.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]