| Literature DB >> 29959925 |
Bing-Rui Zhou1, Jiansheng Jiang2, Rodolfo Ghirlando3, Davood Norouzi4, K N Sathish Yadav5, Hanqiao Feng1, Rui Wang1, Ping Zhang5, Victor Zhurkin4, Yawen Bai6.
Abstract
It has long been suggested that chromatin may form a fiber with a diameter of ~30 nm that suppresses transcription. Despite nearly four decades of study, the structural nature of the 30-nm chromatin fiber and conclusive evidence of its existence in vivo remain elusive. The key support for the existence of specific 30-nm chromatin fiber structures is based on the determination of the structures of reconstituted nucleosome arrays using X-ray crystallography and single-particle cryo-electron microscopy coupled with glutaraldehyde chemical cross-linking. Here we report the characterization of these nucleosome arrays in solution using analytical ultracentrifugation, NMR, and small-angle X-ray scattering. We found that the physical properties of these nucleosome arrays in solution are not consistent with formation of just a few discrete structures of nucleosome arrays. In addition, we obtained a crystal of the nucleosome in complex with the globular domain of linker histone H5 that shows a new form of nucleosome packing and suggests a plausible alternative compact conformation for nucleosome arrays. Taken together, our results challenge the key evidence for the existence of a limited number of structures of reconstituted nucleosome arrays in solution by revealing that the reconstituted nucleosome arrays are actually best described as an ensemble of various conformations with a zigzagged arrangement of nucleosomes. Our finding has implications for understanding the structure and function of chromatin in vivo. Published by Elsevier Ltd.Entities:
Keywords: 30-nm chromatin fiber; NMR; X-ray crystallography; nucleosome; nucleosome arrays
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29959925 PMCID: PMC6204201 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2018.06.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469