Is there specific transcription from isolated chromatin?
Author(s) -
David A. Konkel,
Ver M. Ingram
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/5.4.1237
Subject(s) - biology , microbiology and biotechnology , globin , rna , complementary dna , chromatin , agarose , transcription (linguistics) , messenger rna , rna polymerase ii , gene expression , biochemistry , dna , gene , promoter , linguistics , philosophy
Hg-UMP-containing transcripts made from chick erythroid chromatins with E. coli RNA polymerase hybridize to chick globin cDNA. Contamination with endogenous globin RNA has been largely removed by purification on SH-agarose columns at 55 degrees C. Some endogenous globin mRNA sequences remain, probably as hybrids with "anti-sense" Hg-transcripts produced by RNA-dependent RNA synthesis. Heating to 115 degrees C before SH-agarose chromatography eliminates these contaminants. Hg-transcripts from adult and embryonic erythroid chromatins purified by this method are hybridized to globin cDNA; they contain a 4- to 6-fold higher proportion of globin-specific sequences (10-13 PPM) than do transcripts from brain chromatin. Dissociation of erythroid chromatins in salt and urea, followed by reconstitution using standard methods, destroys even this low degree of specificity.
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