Nucleosomal Arrays Can Be Salt-Reconstituted on a Single-Copy MMTV Promoter DNA Template: Their Properties Differ in Several Ways from Those of Comparable 5S Concatameric Arrays
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 42 (16) , 4681-4690
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi026887o
Abstract
Subsaturated nucleosomal arrays were reconstituted on a single-copy MMTV promoter DNA fragment by salt dialysis procedures and studied by atomic force microscopy. Up to an occupation level of approximately eight nucleosomes on this 1900 bp template, salt reconstitution produces nucleosomal arrays which look very similar to comparably loaded 5S rDNA nucleosomal arrays; i.e., nucleosomes are dispersed on the DNA template. Thus, at these occupation levels, the single-copy MMTV template forms arrays suitable for biophysical analyses. A quantitative comparison of the population features of subsaturated MMTV and 5S arrays detects differences between the two: a requirement for higher histone levels to achieve a given level of nucleosome occupation on MMTV templates, indicating that nucleosome loading is thermodynamically less favorable on this template; a preference for pairwise nucleosome occupation of the MMTV (but not the 5S) template at midrange occupation levels; and an enhanced salt stability for nucleosomes on MMTV versus 5S arrays, particularly in the midrange of array occupation. When average occupation levels exceed approximately eight nucleosomes per template, MMTV arrays show a significant level of mainly intramolecular compaction; 5S arrays do not. Taken together, these results show clearly that the nature of the underlying DNA template can affect the physical properties of nucleosomal arrays. DNA sequence-directed differences in the physical properties of chromatin may have important consequences for functional processes such as gene regulation.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- New DNA sequence rules for high affinity binding to histone octamer and sequence-directed nucleosome positioningJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Positioning and stability of nucleosomes on MMTV 3′LTR sequencesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Chicken erythrocyte nucleosomes have a defined orientation along the linker DNA-A scanning force microscopy studyScanning, 1997
- The Nucleosomal Array: Structure/Function RelationshipsCritical Reviews™ in Eukaryotic Gene Expression, 1996
- Chromatin assembly on plasmid DNA in vitro: Apparent spreading of nucleosome alignment from one region of pBR327 by histone H5Journal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Chromatosome positioning on assembled long chromatin: Linker histones affect nucleosome placement on 5 S rDNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Structure of replicating simian virus 40 minichromosomesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1986
- A model chromatin assembly systemJournal of Molecular Biology, 1984
- Hydrodynamic studies of the interaction between nucleosome core particles and core histonesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1981
- DNA folding by histones: The kinetics of chromatin core particle reassembly and the interaction of nucleosomes with histonesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1979