Publication | Open Access
Nicking-closing enzyme assembles nucleosome-like structures in vitro.
82
Citations
28
References
1979
Year
DnaProtein AssemblyMolecular BiologyEpigeneticsDna NanotechnologyNicking-closing EnzymeDna ComputingMulti-protein AssemblyMacromolecular AssembliesBiochemistryDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationCore HistonesStructural BiologyContour LengthChromatinChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesChromatin ExtractMedicine
The four core histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) and DNA were assembled into nucleosome-like particles at physiological ionic strengths either by an extract of chromatin rich in nicking-closing activity or by the purified nicking-closing enzyme itself. When histone-DNA complexes were assembled in vitro from relaxed circular DNA, nearly physiological numbers of superhelical turns were induced in the DNA molecule. Electron microscopy of the complexes assembled by the chromatin extract revealed a beaded structure and a reduction of the contour length compared to free DNA. Micrococcal nuclease digestion of the histone-DNA complexes yielded 145-base-pair DNA fragments typical of nucleosome core particles and shorter subnucleosomal DNA fragments of discrete length.
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