Structural Polymorphism of the Nucleosomal DNA and Implications for Protein Binding


Autoria(s): Marathe, Arvind; Bansal, Manju
Data(s)

01/06/2009

Resumo

A nucleosome forms a basic unit of the chromosome structure. A biologically relevant question is how much of the nucleosomal conformational space is accessible to protein-free DNA, and what proportion of the nucleosomal conformations are induced by bound histones. To investigate this, we have analysed high resolution xray crystal structure datasets of DNA in protein-free as well as protein-bound forms, and compared the dinucleotide step parameters for the two datasets with those for high resolution nucleosome structures. Our analysis shows that most of the dinucleotide step parameter values for the nucleosome structures lie within the range accessible to protein-free DNA, indirectly indicating that the histone core plays more of a stabilizing role. The nucleosome structures are observed to assume smooth and nearly planar curvature, implying that ‘normal’ B-DNA like parameters can give rise to a curved geometry at the gross structural level. Different nucleosome

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/21002/1/15.pdf

Marathe, Arvind and Bansal, Manju (2009) Structural Polymorphism of the Nucleosomal DNA and Implications for Protein Binding. In: Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics, 26 (6). pp. 925-926.

Publicador

Adenine Press

Relação

http://jbsdonline.com/Albany_2009/BookAbstracts16th.pdf

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/21002/

Palavras-Chave #Molecular Biophysics Unit
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed