Chromatin structure studied by linear dichroism at different salt concentrations
✍ Scribed by Folke Tjerneld; Bengt Nordén; Håkan Wallin
- Book ID
- 102761098
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 865 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We have studied the linear dichroism (LD) of rat liver chromatin oriented by flow. Soluble chromatin, prepared by brief nuclease digestion, is found to exhibit a positive LD at low ionic strength (1 m__M__ NaCl), with a constant LD/A over the absorption band centered at 260 nm (A, isotropic absorbance). Several previous dichroism studies on soluble chromatin have been performed on sonicated materials and have given negative LD, probably due to the presence of uncoiled DNA. The positive dichroism can be interpreted in terms of a supercoil of DNA in chromatin with a pitch angle larger than 55°, and is, for example, consistent with a model where the cylindrical nucleosome core particles are stacked face to face in the chromatin filament. In contrast to the nuclease‐digested chromatin, sonicated chromatin was confirmed to exhibit negative LD. This difference can be attributed to a partial uncoiling of the linker regions between the nucleosomes due to the shearing. The structural transition of chromatin to a compact form can be observed as a reduction of the positive LD of the nuclease‐digested chromatin to almost zero in 0.1 M NaCl or in 0.1 m__M__ MgCl~2~. This transition is due to a decreased electrostatic repulsion between negative phosphate groups on the DNA chain. In the case of Na^+^, this can be explained as a screening effect due to the bulk concentration of Na^+^. With Mg^2+^ a considerably stronger effect may indicate a more localized binding to the phosphates. At ionic strengths higher than 0.5__M__ NaCl, the dissociation of the histones from DNA leads to uncoiling of chromatin. The change in LD during this process shows that histone H1 contributes only to a small degree to the coiling of the DNA chain, whereas histones H3 and H4 play the major role in the coiling.
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