Chemical evidence that chromatin DNA exists as 160 base pair beads interspersed with 40 base pair bridges.

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RESUMO

Digestion of rat liver nuclei by an endogenous endonuclease generates double-stranded DNA fragments which are initially about 205 base pairs long, as reported previously by Hewish and Burgoyne. As digestion proceeds, the average size of these fragments is reduced to about 160 base pairs. Electrophoresis under denaturing conditions shows that these DNA fragments contain single strand nicks at ten base intervals. Fifteen bands, 10-150 bases, are clearly resolvable. DNA Fragments of 160 to 200 nucleotides are not resolved as distinct species. The results suggest that the chromosomal subunit contains both a 160 base-pair DNA segment, in a conformation susceptible to single strand nicking at ten base intervals, and a forty base-pair DNA segment in a conformation more uniformly susceptible to endogenous endonuclease activity. This chemical evidence agrees with morphological observations suggesting that chromatin has a "bead and bridge" structure.

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