Thermal denaturation of nucleosomal core particles
Author(s) -
Wolfgang Weischet,
Kelly Tatchell,
K. E. Van Holde,
H. Klump
Publication year - 1978
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/5.1.139
Subject(s) - denaturation (fissile materials) , absorbance , circular dichroism , dna , crystallography , nucleic acid denaturation , ionic strength , base pair , histone , biophysics , phase (matter) , protein secondary structure , biology , materials science , chemistry , chromatography , biochemistry , base sequence , organic chemistry , aqueous solution , nuclear chemistry
Thermal denaturation of very homogeneous preparations of core particles from chicken erythrocyte chromatin is studied by several techniques. The change in absorbance, which is very closely paralleled by changes in heat capacity, which is very closely paralleled by changes in heat capacity, is a biphasic process with inflexions at 60 degrees C and 74 degrees C. In contrast, isolated DNA of the same length denatures in a single transition around 44 degrees C. Monitoring the circular dichroism of the cores during thermal denaturation reveals biphasic changes in the secondary structure of the DNA, preceding the base unstacking by 10 degrees C in the first and 3 degrees C in the second phase. However, measurable alterations in the secondary structure of the histones are confined to the second phase with a melting temperature at 71 degrees C. Increase in the ionic strength of the buffer from 1 mM to 10 mM leads to almost monophasic melting curves as measured by absorbance and CD, while not causing any measurable conformational changes at room temperature. The melting of core particles is interpreted as a denaturation of about 40 base pairs in the first phase, followed by a massive breakdown of the native structure of a tight histone-DNA complex, which frees the remaining 100 base pairs for unstacking.
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