33 research outputs found

    Nucleosomes in gene regulation: theoretical approaches

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    This work reviews current theoretical approaches of biophysics and bioinformatics for the description of nucleosome arrangements in chromatin and transcription factor binding to nucleosomal organized DNA. The role of nucleosomes in gene regulation is discussed from molecular-mechanistic and biological point of view. In addition to classical problems of this field, actual questions of epigenetic regulation are discussed. The authors selected for discussion what seem to be the most interesting concepts and hypotheses. Mathematical approaches are described in a simplified language to attract attention to the most important directions of this field

    Biochemestry

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    XXIX+1129hlm.;28c

    A model for particulate structure in chromatin

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    A model is proposed for the structure of nuclease-resistant chromatin particles. The model is novel in that it proposes that the DNA in such a particle is wound about a protein core, made up of the hydrophobic regions of histone molecules

    Biochemistry

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    xxviii+1186hlm.;c

    DNA-histone interactions in nucleosomes

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    Low-angle neutron scattering from chromatin subunit particles

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    Competition between histone H1 and HMGN proteins for chromatin binding sites

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    The ability of regulatory factors to access their nucleosomal targets is modulated by nuclear proteins such as histone H1 and HMGN (previously named HMG-14/-17 family) that bind to nucleosomes and either stabilize or destabilize the higher-order chromatin structure. We tested whether HMGN proteins affect the interaction of histone H1 with chromatin. Using microinjection into living cells expressing H1–GFP and photobleaching techniques, we found that wild-type HMGN, but not HMGN point mutants that do not bind to nucleosomes, inhibits the binding of H1 to nucleosomes. HMGN proteins compete with H1 for nucleosome sites but do not displace statically bound H1 from chromatin. Our results provide evidence for in vivo competition among chromosomal proteins for binding sites on chromatin and suggest that the local structure of the chromatin fiber is modulated by a dynamic interplay between nucleosomal binding proteins
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