Nucleic Acids Research, 1984, Vol. 12, No. 15 6179-6196
© 1984
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY |
Presence of nucleosomes within irregularly cleaved fragments of newly replicated chromatin*
Division of Cellular Biology, Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation 10666 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA
Received March 21, 1984. Revised June 20, 1984. Accepted July 10, 1984.
In previous reports (Annunziato et al., J. Biol. Chem., 256:1188011886 [1981]; Annunziato and Seale, Biochemistry 21:54315438 [1982] we have described two classes of newly replicated chromatin which differ in structure, solubility properties, and requirements for maturation. One class is nucleosomal, soluble at low to intermediate ionic strengths, and acquires mature nucleosomal composition and normal repeat length in the absence of concurrent protein synthesis. In contrast, the other class is cleaved irregularly by MNase* (appearing as a smear in DNA gels), is insoluble at moderate ionic strengths, requires protein synthesis to gain normal subunit structure, and comprises
60% of total new chromatin DNA after mild nuclease digestion. It Is now demonstrated that this heterogeneous component (produced by the action of either MNase or Hae III on chromatin replicated in cycloheximide) yields nucleosomes when redigested with MNase. The presence of nucleosomes within heterogeneous chromatin fragments suggests that nucleosomal and non-nucleosomal regions may be juxtaposed during chromatin replication. These findings are discussed with respect to current models of nucleosome segregation.
*This is manuscript number 3138-BCR from the Research Institute of Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, CA.
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