Structural domains of plant nuclear DNA as a constitutive component of the topoisomerase II/DNA complex.
Author(s) -
V. T. Solovyan,
I. O. Andreyev
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
acta biochimica polonica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.452
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1734-154X
pISSN - 0001-527X
DOI - 10.18388/abp.1995_4609
Subject(s) - topoisomerase , chromatin , dna , histone , nuclear dna , cleavage (geology) , dna clamp , chemistry , dna supercoil , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , dna replication , gene , reverse transcriptase , paleontology , rna , fracture (geology) , mitochondrial dna
The treatment of agarose embedded plant nuclei by strong protein denaturants was demonstrated to result in discrete self-fragmentation of intact nuclear DNA. The set of resultant DNA cleavage products involves two main types of DNA fragments sized about 50-100 kb and 300-500 kb, being of the same type in various eukaryotic representatives. The pattern of ordered DNA fragmentation has been shown to be similar both in intact nuclei and in histone-depleted ones thus suggesting that the observed DNA fragments represent preexisting DNA structural domains, corresponding to the higher levels of chromatin folding. The topoisomerase II-specific poison teniposide (VM-26) has been shown to increase the ordered DNA cleavage while the conditions stimulating the topoisomerase II-mediated reverse reaction lead to the reassociation of the cleaved DNA domains. The data presented suggest that the nuclear DNA structural domains are involved in functioning of the topoisomerase II/DNA complex, the main property of which is its ability to mediate the cleavage/reassociation reactions.
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