Abstract

When mouse brain nuclei are optimally digested with micrococcal nuclease, most of the chromatin is soluble in a 180 mM salt/1 mM EDTA buffer [1]. At this ionic concentration, chromatin maintains its native structure [2]. In attempt to selectively extract different fractions of chromatin from digested nuclei, we have examined the differential solubility of chromatin in the 180 mM salt buffer containing concentrations of MgCl 2 ranging from 2 to 0 mM. The results suggest that digested chromatin may be fractionated into specific soluble chromatin fractions which correspond to nuclease-sensitive chromatin, bulk chromatin, and heterochromatin. These soluble fractions have a high molecular weight (up to 20 kbp), and contain a full complement of histones as well as a complex assortment of non-histone proteins. The residual insoluble fraction may be equivalent to a native, nuclear matrix-bound chromatin fraction.

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