These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: [Nucleomeric organization of chromatin]. Author: Kir'ianov GI, Smirnova TA, Poliakov VIu. Journal: Biokhimiia; 1981 Nov; 46(11):1923-37. PubMed ID: 6797481. Abstract: Chromatin in the nuclei fixed in tissue and in the nuclei isolated by low ionic strength solutions in the presence of Mg2+ is represented by globular (nucleomeric) fibrils, 20-25 nm in diameter. The staphylococcal or endogenous nuclear nuclease splits the chromatin fibrils resulting in fragments corresponding to nucleomers and their multimers. Upon removal of firmly bound Mg2+ the nucleomers unfold to form chains consisting of 4-6-8 nucleosomes. Mild hydrolysis of nuclear chromatin by staphylococcal nuclease results in a split-off of mono-, di- and trimers of nucleomers sedimenting in a sucrose density gradient in the presence of EDTA as particles with the sedimentation coefficients of 37, 47 and 55S, respectively. The sedimentation coefficient for the mononucleomer in a sucrose density gradient with MgCl2 is 45S. Determination of the length of DNA fragments of chromatin split-off by staphylococcal nuclease showed that the nucleomer consists of 8 nucleosomes, while the dimer and trimer of the nucleomer consists of 14-16 and 21-24 nucleosomes, respectively. The nucleomeric monomer undergoes structural transition from the compact (45S) to the "loose" state (37S) after removal of Mg2+. This transition is completely reversible, when the nucleomer contains histone H1. The removal of the latter or dialysis of the nucleomer against EDTA in low ionic strength solutions results in a complete unfolding of the nucleomer into a nucleosomal chain fragment. A model for the nucleomer fibril structure in which the helical organization of the nucleosomal chain in the nucleomer (2 turns with 4 nucleosomes in each) is alternated with the impaired helical bonds between the nucleomers is discussed. The functional significance of the nucleomeric organization of chromatin may be an additional restriction of the site-specific recognition of DNA in chromatin with the possibility of local (at the level of one nucleomer) changes in chromatin conformation excluding this restriction.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]