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Nucleic Acids Research, 1974, Vol. 1, No. 11 1371-1384
© 1974


Articles

Investigation of huge negative circular dichroism spectra of some nucleoproteins

Hsueh Jei Li, Paul Epstein, Sharon S. Yu and Benjamin Brand

Department of Chemistry, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York Brooklyn, New York, 11210, USA

Received July 25, 1974. Under certain conditions of preparation, DNA, whether free or complexed with polylysine or histone KAP (I, fl), produce huge negative circular dichroism (CD) spectra with maxima at about 270nm. In order to investigate the cause of these spectra, reconstituted polylysine-DNA complex was used as a model system. It was found that the CD change of DNA in the complex is not a linear function of the fraction of base pairs bound. Such a CD spectrum is not changed despite dilution up to 128 folds for as long as 12 hours. Difference CD spectra taken between free DNA and any of the complexes are qualitatively the same, and are similar to those of free DNA and nucleohistone KAP (Fasman et al., Biochemistry 9, 2814–2822, 1970), free DNA and direct mixed polylysine-DNA complexes, or free DNA in high salt (Chang et al., Biochemistry 12, 3022–3032, 1973). The suggestion is made that this CD spectrum might be caused by specific conformational changes in DNA, perhaps belonging to the family of B to C transitions followed by a further structural distortion of DNA due to aggregation of the nucleoprotein molecules.


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