Abstract
A procedure for fractionation of nuclei from rat liver, Xenopus liver and Xenopus erythrocytes is described. It is based on mild sonication of isolated nuclei for 7–12 sec in a nearly isotonic medium, separation of nuclear sap and centrifugation on a discontinuous sucrose density gradient containing Na and K citrate. Nuclei are thus separated in a single operation into 8 fractions representing nucleoplasm, euchromatin, nucleoli, heterochromatin and nuclear membranes. The sub-nuclear fractions were characterized by chemical composition (DNA, protein, RNA and phospholipid), electron microscopy, thermal denaturation properties of chromatin, relative binding of 3 H-actinomycin D , polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of nuclear proteins and titration of membranes against Triton X-100. Approx. 10% of total DNA was recovered as heterochromatin associated with membranes but the bulk of nuclear membranes co-sedimented with the major euchromatin zones. Subnuclear fractions prepared in this way retain virtually all the RNA polymerase activity bound to chromatin [41].
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