Abstract

A small proportion (0.1-0.5%) of the total DNA content of native Chinese hamster metaphase chromosomes is protected from nucleolytic degradation following the removal of histones by extraction with either 0.2 N HCl or 2 M NaCl, and remains attached to the nonhistone protein core. Acid extraction followed by DNase I digestion leads to small fragments of 10-30 bases. Salt extraction followed by micrococcal nuclease digestion gives approx. 140 b.p. fragments which are undistinguishable in size from nucleosome core DNA fragments. Furthermore, DNase I treatment of salt extracted chromosomes gives DNA fragments containing single strands which are multiples of 10 bases in length, again characteristic of the nucleosome structure. Reassociation kinetics using the 32P-labelled 140 b.p. fragments as probes suggests they are enriched for rapidly reassociating sequences.

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