Literature DB >> 6631965

Location of the primary sites of micrococcal nuclease cleavage on the nucleosome core.

M Cockell, D Rhodes, A Klug.   

Abstract

The positions and relative frequencies of the primary cleavages made by micrococcal nuclease on the DNA of nucleosome core particles have been found by fractionating the double-stranded products of digestion and examining their single-stranded compositions. This approach overcomes the problems caused by secondary events such as the exonucleolytic and pseudo-double-stranded actions of the nuclease and, combined with the use of high resolution gel electrophoresis, enables the cutting site positions to be determined with a higher precision than has been achieved hitherto. The micrococcal nuclease primary cleavage sites lie close (on average, within 0.5 nucleotide) to those previously determined by Lutter (1981) for the nucleases DNase I and DNase II. These similarities show that the accessible regions are the same for all three nucleases, the cleavage sites being dictated by the structure of the nucleosome core. The differences in the final products of the digestion are explained in terms of secondary cleavage events of micrococcal nuclease. While the strongly protected regions of the nucleosome core DNA are common to all three nucleases, there are differences in the relative degrees of cutting at the more exposed sites characteristic of the particular enzyme. In particular, micrococcal nuclease shows a marked polarity in the 3'-5' direction in the cutting rates as plotted along a single strand of the nucleosomal DNA. This is explained in terms of the three-dimensional structure of the nucleosome where, in any accessible region of the double helix, the innermost strand is shielded by the outermost strand on the one side and the histone core on the other. The final part of the paper is concerned with the preference of micrococcal nuclease to cleave at (A,T) sequences in chromatin.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6631965     DOI: 10.1016/s0022-2836(83)80156-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  29 in total

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2.  Chromatin assembly on replicating DNA in vitro.

Authors:  G Almouzni; D J Clark; M Méchali; A P Wolffe
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1990-10-11       Impact factor: 16.971

3.  Nucleosome positioning, nucleosome spacing and the nucleosome code.

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4.  Micrococcal nuclease as a probe for bound and distorted DNA in lac transcription and repression complexes.

Authors:  L Zhang; J D Gralla
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1989-07-11       Impact factor: 16.971

5.  Wrapping of genomic polydA.polydT tracts around nucleosome core particles.

Authors:  K R Fox
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1992-03-25       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  Aberrant silencing of the CpG island-containing human O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase gene is associated with the loss of nucleosome-like positioning.

Authors:  S A Patel; D M Graunke; R O Pieper
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1997-10       Impact factor: 4.272

7.  ACF catalyses chromatosome movements in chromatin fibres.

Authors:  Verena K Maier; Mariacristina Chioda; Daniela Rhodes; Peter B Becker
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2007-10-25       Impact factor: 11.598

8.  TTF-I determines the chromatin architecture of the active rDNA promoter.

Authors:  G Längst; P B Becker; I Grummt
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  1998-06-01       Impact factor: 11.598

9.  Combined micrococcal nuclease and exonuclease III digestion reveals precise positions of the nucleosome core/linker junctions: implications for high-resolution nucleosome mapping.

Authors:  Tatiana Nikitina; Difei Wang; Misha Gomberg; Sergei A Grigoryev; Victor B Zhurkin
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2013-02-28       Impact factor: 5.469

10.  A library-based method to rapidly analyse chromatin accessibility at multiple genomic regions.

Authors:  Asjad Basheer; Harald Berger; Yazmid Reyes-Dominguez; Markus Gorfer; Joseph Strauss
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2009-02-27       Impact factor: 16.971

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