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Chromatin and Chromosomes: by Benjamin Lewin

Chromatin is made up of nucleosomes, which consist of DNA wrapped around an octamer of histone proteins. Chromatin exists in two forms: euchromatin, which is less condensed, and heterochromatin, which remains tightly packed. Chromosomes can be visualized via staining techniques that reveal banding patterns. DNA is attached to a protein scaffold via loops. Specific DNA sequences attach to the nuclear matrix. The centromere, which contains repetitive DNA sequences, attaches microtubules during cell division. Telomeres contain repetitive sequences that protect chromosome ends. Various specialized chromosomes like lampbrush and polytene chromosomes reveal sites of gene expression. Nucleosomes are the basic repeating units of chromatin, containing 147bp of

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views46 pages

Chromatin and Chromosomes: by Benjamin Lewin

Chromatin is made up of nucleosomes, which consist of DNA wrapped around an octamer of histone proteins. Chromatin exists in two forms: euchromatin, which is less condensed, and heterochromatin, which remains tightly packed. Chromosomes can be visualized via staining techniques that reveal banding patterns. DNA is attached to a protein scaffold via loops. Specific DNA sequences attach to the nuclear matrix. The centromere, which contains repetitive DNA sequences, attaches microtubules during cell division. Telomeres contain repetitive sequences that protect chromosome ends. Various specialized chromosomes like lampbrush and polytene chromosomes reveal sites of gene expression. Nucleosomes are the basic repeating units of chromatin, containing 147bp of

Uploaded by

Kavisa Ghosh
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 6

Chromatin and chromosomes


By
Benjamin Lewin
6.2 Chromatin is divided into euchromatin
and heterochromatin
• Individual chromosomes can be seen only during
mitosis.

• During interphase, the general mass of chromatin is


in the form of euchromatin.
– Euchromatin is less tightly packed than mitotic
chromosomes.

• Regions of heterochromatin remain densely packed


throughout interphase.
6.3 Chromosomes have banding patterns

• Certain staining techniques cause the


chromosomes to have the appearance of a series of
striations called G-bands.

• The bands are lower in G • C content than the


interbands.

• Genes are concentrated in the G • C-rich


interbands.
6.4 Eukaryotic DNA has loops and domains
attached to a scaffold
• DNA of interphase chromatin is negatively
supercoiled into independent domains of
~85 kb.

• Metaphase chromosomes have a protein


scaffold to which the loops of supercoiled
DNA are attached.
6.5 Specific sequences attach DNA to an
interphase matrix
• DNA is attached to the nuclear matrix at
specific sequences called MARs or SARs.

• The MARs are A • T-rich but do not have


any specific consensus sequence.
6.6 The centromere is essential for
segregation
• A eukaryotic chromosome is held on the
mitotic spindle by the attachment of
microtubules to the kinetochore that forms
in its centromeric region.

• Centromeres often have heterochromatin


that is rich in satellite DNA sequences.
6.7 Centromeres have short DNA sequences
in S. cerevisiae
• CEN elements are identified in S. cerevisiae
by the ability to allow a plasmid to
segregate accurately at mitosis.

• CEN elements consist of short conserved


sequences CDE-I and CDE-III that flank the
A • T-rich region CDE-II.
6.8 The centromere binds a protein complex
• A specialized protein complex that is an
alternative to the usual chromatin structure is
formed at CDE-II.

• The CBF3 protein complex that binds to CDE-III


is essential for centromeric function.

• The proteins that connect these two complexes


may provide the connection to microtubules.
6.9 Centromeres may contain repetitious
DNA
• Centromeres in higher eukaryotic
chromosomes contain large amounts of
repetitious DNA.

• The function of the repetitious DNA is not


known.
6.10 Telomeres are replicated by a special
mechanism
• The telomere is required for the stability of
the chromosome end.

• A telomere consists of a simple repeat


where a C+A-rich strand has the sequence
C>1(A/T)1-4.
6.11 Telomeres seal the chromosome ends

• The protein TRF2 catalyzes a reaction in


which:
– the 3 repeating unit of the G+T-rich strand
forms a loop by displacing its homologue in an
upstream region of the telomere.
6.12 Lampbrush chromosomes are extended

• Sites of gene expression on lampbrush


chromosomes show loops that are extended
from the chromosomal axis.
6.13 Polytene chromosomes form bands

• Polytene chromosomes of Dipterans have a


series of bands that can be used as a
cytological map.
6.14 Polytene chromosomes expand at sites of
gene expression
• Bands that are sites of gene expression on
polytene chromosomes expand to give
“puffs.”
6.15 The nucleosome is the subunit of all
chromatin
• Micrococcal nuclease releases individual
nucleosomes from chromatin as 11S particles.

• A nucleosome contains:
– ~200 bp of DNA
– two copies of each core histone (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4)
– one copy of H1

• DNA is wrapped around the outside surface of the


protein octamer.
6.16 DNA is coiled in arrays of nucleosomes

• Greater than 95% of the DNA is recovered


in nucleosomes or multimers when
micrococcal nuclease cleaves DNA of
chromatin.

• The length of DNA per nucleosome varies


for individual tissues in a range from 154-
260 bp.
6.17 Nucleosomes have a common structure

• Nucleosomal DNA is divided into the core


DNA and linker DNA depending on its
susceptibility to micrococcal nuclease.

• The core DNA is the length of 146 bp that


is found on the core particles produced by
prolonged digestion with micrococcal
nuclease.
6.17 Nucleosomes have a common structure

• Linker DNA is the region of 8-114 bp that


is susceptible to early cleavage by the
enzyme.

• Changes in the length of linker DNA


account for the variation in total length of
nucleosomal DNA.

• H1 is associated with linker DNA and may


lie at the point where DNA enters and
leaves the nucleosome.
6.18 DNA structure varies on the
nucleosomal surface
• 1.65 turns of DNA are wound around the
histone octamer.

• The structure of the DNA is altered so that


it has:
– an increased number of base pairs/turn in the
middle
– but a decreased number at the ends
6.18 DNA structure varies on the nucleosomal surface

• Approximately 0.6 negative turns of DNA


are absorbed by the change in bp/turn from
10.5 in solution to an average of 10.2 on the
nucleosomal surface.
– This explains the linking number paradox.
6.19 Organization of the histone octamer

• The histone octamer has a kernel of a H32 •


H42 tetramer associated with two H2A •
H2B dimers.

• Each histone is extensively interdigitated


with its partner.
6.19 Organization of the histone octamer

• All core histones have the structural motif


of the histone fold.

• The histone N-terminal tails extend out of


the nucleosome.
6.20 The path of nucleosomes in the
chromatin fiber
• 10-nm chromatin fibers are unfolded from 30-nm
fibers and consist of a string of nucleosomes.

• 30-nm fibers have 6 nucleosomes/turn, organized


into a solenoid.

• Histone H1 is required for formation of the 30-nm


fiber.
6.21 Reproduction of chromatin requires
assembly of nucleosomes
• Histone octamers are not conserved during replication;
– However, H2A • H2B dimers and H32 • H42 tetramers are
conserved.

• There are different pathways for the assembly of


nucleosomes during replication and independently of
replication.

• Accessory proteins are required to assist the assembly


of nucleosomes.
6.21 Reproduction of chromatin requires assembly of nucleosomes

• CAF-1 is an assembly protein that is linked


to the PCNA subunit of the replisome;
– it is required for deposition of H32 • H42
tetramers following replication.

• A different assembly protein and a variant


of histone H3 may be used for replication-
independent assembly.
6.22 Do nucleosomes lie at specific positions?
• Nucleosomes may form at specific positions as the result
either of:
– the local structure of DNA
– proteins that interact with specific sequences

• The most common cause of nucleosome positioning is


when proteins binding to DNA establish a boundary.

• Positioning may affect which regions of DNA are in the


linker and which face of DNA is exposed on the
nucleosome surface.
6.23 Domains define regions that contain
active genes
• A domain containing a transcribed gene is
defined by increased sensitivity to
degradation by DNAase I.
6.24 Are transcribed genes organized in
nucleosomes?
• Nucleosomes are found at the same
frequency when transcribed genes or
nontranscribed genes are digested with
micrococcal nuclease.

• Some heavily transcribed genes appear to


be exceptional cases that are devoid of
nucleosomes.
6.25 Histone octamers are displaced by
transcription
• RNA polymerase displaces histone
octamers during transcription in a model
system;
– Octamers reassociate with DNA as soon as the
polymerase has passed.

• Nucleosomes are reorganized when


transcription passes through a gene.
6.26 Nucleosome displacement and
reassembly require special factors
• Ancillary factors are required both:
– for RNA polymerase to displace octamers
during transcription
– for the histones to reassemble into nucleosomes
after transcription
6.27 DNAase hypersensitive sites change
chromatin structure
• Hypersensitive sites are found at the
promoters of expressed genes.

• They are generated by the binding of


transcription factors that displace histone
octamers.
6.28 Chromatin remodeling is an active
process
• Chromatin structure is changed by
remodeling complexes that use energy
provided by hydrolysis of ATP.

• The SWI/SNF, RSC, and NURF complexes


all are very large;
– there are some common subunits.
6.28 Chromatin remodeling is an active process

• A remodeling complex does not itself have


specificity for any particular target site;
– it must be recruited by a component of the
transcription apparatus.

• Remodeling complexes are recruited to


promoters by sequence-specific activators.

• The factor may be released once the


remodeling complex has bound.
6.19 Histone acetylation is associated with
genetic activity
• Histone acetylation occurs transiently at
replication.

• Histone acetylation is associated with


activation of gene expression.

• Deacetylated chromatin may have a more


condensed structure.
6.19 Histone acetylation is associated with genetic activity

• Transcription activators are associated with


histone acetylase activities in large
complexes.

• The remodeling complex may recruit the


acetylating complex.

• Histone acetylases vary in their target


specificity.
6.19 Histone acetylation is associated with genetic activity

• Acetylation could affect transcription in a


quantitative or qualitative way.

• Deacetylation is associated with repression


of gene activity.
6.19 Histone acetylation is associated with genetic activity

• Deacetylases are present in complexes with


repressor activity.

• Acetylation of histones may be the event


that maintains the complex in the activated
state.
6.30 Heterochromatin propagates from a
nucleation event
• Heterochromatin is nucleated at a specific
sequence.
– The inactive structure propagates along the
chromatin fiber.

• Genes within regions of heterochromatin


are inactivated.
6.30 Heterochromatin propagates from a nucleation event

• The length of the inactive region varies


from cell to cell.
– Inactivation of genes in this vicinity causes
position effect variegation.

• Similar spreading effects occur at:


– telomeres
– the silent cassettes in yeast mating type
6.31 Heterochromatin depends on interactions
with histones
• HP1 is the key protein in forming
mammalian heterochromatin.
– It acts by binding to methylated H3 histone.

• RAP1 initiates formation of


heterochromatin in yeast by binding to
specific target sequences in DNA.
6.31 Heterochromatin depends on interactions with histones

• The targets of RAP1 include telomeric


repeats and silencers at HML and HMR.

• RAP1 recruits SIR3/SIR4, which interact


with the N-terminal tails of H3 and H4.
6.32 X chromosomes undergo global changes

• One of the two X chromosomes is


inactivated at random in each cell during
embryogenesis of eutherian mammals.

• In exceptional cases where there are >2 X


chromosomes, all but one are inactivated.
6.32 X chromosomes undergo global changes

• The Xic (X inactivation center) is a cis-


acting region on the X chromosome.
– It is necessary and sufficient to ensure that only
one X chromosome remains active.

• Xic includes the Xist gene.


– Xist codes for an RNA that is found only on
inactive X chromosomes.
6.32 X chromosomes undergo global changes

• The mechanism that is responsible for


preventing Xist RNA from accumulating on
the active chromosome is unknown.
6.33 Chromosome condensation is caused by
condensins
• SMC proteins are ATPases that include:
– the condensins
– the cohesins

• A heterodimer of SMC proteins associates


with other subunits.
6.33 Chromosome condensation is caused by condensins

• The condensins cause chromatin to be more


tightly coiled by introducing positive
supercoils into DNA.

• Condensins are responsible for condensing


chromosomes at mitosis.

• Chromosome-specific condensins are


responsible for condensing inactive X
chromosomes in C. elegans.

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