The use of the scanning force microscope (SFM) to visualize and analyze chromatin fiber structures is presented. Protocols to prepare chromatin fibers for SN imaging of fibers in air and in buffer are first discussed. Next, the conditions for acquiring high-quality SFM images such as optimal instrumental parameters, appropriate deposition substrates, and adequate procedures of sample deposition are described. It is shown that analysis and quantitation of the SFM images support an irregular, three-dimensional arrangement of nucleosomes in the native chromatin fiber. This structure is lost in linker histone-depleted fibers, which show, instead, a beads-on-a-string structure. Molecular modeling of the chromatin fiber structures and computer simulation of the SFM imaging process indicate that the natural variability of the linker length may be the major determinant of the structural irregularity of the native chromatin fiber. Removal of linker histones (H1/H5) may change the amount of DNA wrapped around the histone octamer, which in turn may induce the transition from a three-dimensional irregular helix to an extended beads-on-a-string structure. Studies of trinucleosomes indicate that both the average successive nucleosome center-to-center distance and the average angle between two successive linkers increase upon the removal of linker histone. (C) 1997 Academic Press.
Visualization and analysis of chromatin by scanning force microscopy
Zuccheri G;
1997
Abstract
The use of the scanning force microscope (SFM) to visualize and analyze chromatin fiber structures is presented. Protocols to prepare chromatin fibers for SN imaging of fibers in air and in buffer are first discussed. Next, the conditions for acquiring high-quality SFM images such as optimal instrumental parameters, appropriate deposition substrates, and adequate procedures of sample deposition are described. It is shown that analysis and quantitation of the SFM images support an irregular, three-dimensional arrangement of nucleosomes in the native chromatin fiber. This structure is lost in linker histone-depleted fibers, which show, instead, a beads-on-a-string structure. Molecular modeling of the chromatin fiber structures and computer simulation of the SFM imaging process indicate that the natural variability of the linker length may be the major determinant of the structural irregularity of the native chromatin fiber. Removal of linker histones (H1/H5) may change the amount of DNA wrapped around the histone octamer, which in turn may induce the transition from a three-dimensional irregular helix to an extended beads-on-a-string structure. Studies of trinucleosomes indicate that both the average successive nucleosome center-to-center distance and the average angle between two successive linkers increase upon the removal of linker histone. (C) 1997 Academic Press.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.