Abstract

The DNase I sensitivity of the nuclear genes encoding the NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase, the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP), the hordeins and a 15-kDa protein of unknown function was assayed in chromatin of etiolated and green leaves and endosperm tissue of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). A tissue-specific differentiation of chromatin structure was found for the LHCP, hordein and 15-kDa protein genes. The genes for the LHCP and the 15-kDa protein, which are expressed in leaf tissue, display DNase I sensitivity in leaves but not in endosperm. Hordein genes which are expressed solely in endosperm, were insensitive to low levels of digestion with DNase I in leaves but sensitive in endosperm. The effect of light on chromatin structure was determined by comparing leaves of etiolated plants and plants which had been grown under a day/night cycle. Only in the case of the 15-kDa protein is there a remarkable change from a DNAse-I-sensitive configuration in etiolated leaves to a more resistant one in leaves from illuminated plants. The gene for the NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase was found to be equally sensitive to DNase I in leaves and endosperm.

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