Abstract

DNA replication is initiated by binding of initiation factors to the origin of replication. Nucleosomes are known to inhibit the access of the replication machinery to origin sequences. Recently, nucleosome remodelling factors have been identified that increase the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to transcription regulators. To test whether the initiation of DNA replication from an origin covered by nucleosomes would also benefit from the action of nucleosome remodelling factors, we reconstituted SV40 DNA into chromatin in Drosophila embryo extracts. In the presence of T-antigen and ATP, a chromatin-associated cofactor allowed efficient replication from a nucleosomal origin in vitro. In search of the energy-dependent cofactor responsible we found that purified 'chromatin accessibility complex' (CHRAC) was able to alter the nucleosomal structure at the origin allowing the binding of T-antigen and efficient initiation of replication. These experiments provide evidence for the involvement of a nucleosome remodelling machine in structural changes at the SV40 origin of DNA replication in vitro.

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