APS March Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2010;
Portland, Oregon
Session H2: Recent Advances in Cell and Single Molecule Manipulation
8:00 AM–9:48 AM,
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Room: Oregon Ballroom 202
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Omar Saleh, University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.MAR.H2.2
Abstract: H2.00002 : Unraveling chromatin structure using magnetic tweezers
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
John van Noort
(Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands)
The compact, yet dynamic organization of chromatin plays an essential role
in regulating gene expression. Although the static structure of chromatin
fibers has been studied extensively, the controversy about the higher order
folding
remains. The compaction of eukaryotic DNA into chromatin has been implicated
in the regulation of all DNA processes. To understand the relation between
gene regulation and chromatin structure it is essential to uncover the
mechanisms by which chromatin fibers fold and unfold.
We used magnetic tweezers to probe the mechanical properties of individual
nucleosomes and chromatin fibers consisting of a single, well-defined array
of 25 nucleosomes. From these studies five major features appeared upon
forced extension of chromatin fibers: the elastic stretching of chromatin's
higher order structure, the breaking of internucleosomal contacts,
unwrapping of the first turn of DNA, unwrapping of the second turn of DNA,
and the dissociation of histone octamers. These events occur sequentially at
the increasing force. Neighboring nucleosomes stabilize DNA folding into a
nucleosome relative to isolated nucleosomes. When an array of nucleosomes is
folded into a 30 nm fiber, representing the first level of chromatin
condensation, the fiber stretched like a Hookian spring at forces up to 4
pN. Together with a nucleosome-nucleosome stacking energy of 14 kT this
points to a solenoid as the underlying topology of the 30 nm fiber.
Surprisingly, linker histones do not affect the length or stiffness of the
fibers, but stabilize fiber folding up to forces of 7 pN. The stiffness of
the folded chromatin fiber points at histone tails that mediate nucleosome
stacking. Fibers with a nucleosome repeat length of 167 bp instead of 197 bp
are significantly stiffer, consistent with a two-start helical arrangement.
The extensive thermal breathing of the chromatin fiber that is a consequence
of the observed high compliance provides a structural basis for
understanding the balance between chromatin condensation and transparency
for DNA transactions. The kinetics of force induced nucleosome unstacking
was resolved using a Hidden Markov analysis. Overall, our results reveal a
highly dynamic structure that combines high level of compaction of DNA with
transient accessibility.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.MAR.H2.2