Literature DB >> 15485905

Generic features of tertiary chromatin structure as detected in natural chromosomes.

Waltraud G Müller1, Dietmar Rieder, Gregor Kreth, Christoph Cremer, Zlatko Trajanoski, James G McNally.   

Abstract

Knowledge of tertiary chromatin structure in mammalian interphase chromosomes is largely derived from artificial tandem arrays. In these model systems, light microscope images reveal fibers or beaded fibers after high-density targeting of transactivators to insertional domains spanning several megabases. These images of fibers have lent support to chromonema fiber models of tertiary structure. To assess the relevance of these studies to natural mammalian chromatin, we identified two different approximately 400-kb regions on human chromosomes 6 and 22 and then examined light microscope images of interphase tertiary chromatin structure when the regions were transcriptionally active and inactive. When transcriptionally active, these natural chromosomal regions elongated, yielding images characterized by a series of adjacent puncta or "beads", referred to hereafter as beaded images. These elongated structures required transcription for their maintenance. Thus, despite marked differences in the density and the mode of transactivation, the natural and artificial systems showed similarities, suggesting that beaded images are generic features of transcriptionally active tertiary chromatin. We show here, however, that these images do not necessarily favor chromonema fiber models but can also be explained by a radial-loop model or even a simple nucleosome affinity, random-chain model. Thus, light microscope images of tertiary structure cannot distinguish among competing models, although they do impose key constraints: chromatin must be clustered to yield beaded images and then packaged within each cluster to enable decondensation into adjacent clusters.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15485905      PMCID: PMC522243          DOI: 10.1128/MCB.24.21.9359-9370.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Biol        ISSN: 0270-7306            Impact factor:   4.272


  42 in total

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Authors:  Peter J Horn; Craig L Peterson
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5.  Chromatin structure and chromosome aberrations: modeling of damage induced by isotropic and localized irradiation.

Authors:  G Kreth; C Münkel; J Langowski; T Cremer; C Cremer
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6.  A direct approach to the structure of eukaryotic chromosomes.

Authors:  J Sedat; L Manuelidis
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7.  GAL4-VP16 is an unusually potent transcriptional activator.

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9.  A chromatin folding model that incorporates linker variability generates fibers resembling the native structures.

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Authors:  Paul T Spellman; Gerald M Rubin
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  23 in total

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3.  Co-expressed genes prepositioned in spatial neighborhoods stochastically associate with SC35 speckles and RNA polymerase II factories.

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Review 4.  Mobility of multi-subunit complexes in the nucleus: accessibility and dynamics of chromatin subcompartments.

Authors:  Sabine M Görisch; Peter Lichter; Karsten Rippe
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Review 5.  Gene activation and deactivation related changes in the three-dimensional structure of chromatin.

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Review 6.  Organization of interphase chromatin.

Authors:  Rachel A Horowitz-Scherer; Christopher L Woodcock
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7.  A hyper-dynamic equilibrium between promoter-bound and nucleoplasmic dimers controls NF-kappaB-dependent gene activity.

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8.  Expansion of chromosome territories with chromatin decompaction in BAF53-depleted interphase cells.

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9.  The three-dimensional structure of human interphase chromosomes is related to the transcriptome map.

Authors:  Sandra Goetze; Julio Mateos-Langerak; Hinco J Gierman; Wim de Leeuw; Osdilly Giromus; Mireille H G Indemans; Jan Koster; Vladan Ondrej; Rogier Versteeg; Roel van Driel
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10.  Cell type-specific chromatin decondensation of a metabolic gene cluster in oats.

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