S'identifier

Nucleosomes are the DNA-histone complex, where the DNA strand is wound around the histone core. The histone core is an octamer containing two copies of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 histone proteins.

Nucleosomes, paradoxically, perform two opposite functions simultaneously. On the one hand, their primary aim is to protect the delicate DNA strands from physical damage and help achieve a higher compaction ratio. On the other hand, they must allow polymerase enzymes to access histone-bound DNA during replication and transcription. Nucleosomes solve both problems by partially unfolding the DNA as needed while keeping the majority of the DNA wrapped around the histones.

The histone core proteins have a mobile extended tail region and share a common structurally conserved motif called the "histone fold." The histone fold is made up of alpha helices and loops. During the histone dimerization, loops of two histone proteins align together, forming a dimer.

Each histone binds to the three consecutive minor grooves of DNA. Their alpha helix and N-terminal tail are crucial in binding to the DNA. As a result, any chemical modifications to the histone tail can modify the chromatin assembly and function. The most common histone modifications include acetylation, methylation, and phosphorylation.

Histone proteins have various isoforms or variants like H2A.1, H2A.2, H2A.X, H3.3, or CENP-A. These variants differ in their amino acid sequences and perform distinct functions. The nucleosomes with histone variants are significantly more mobile than ordinary nucleosomes. For example, the incorporation of H2A.Z into the nucleosome is shown to activate transcription.

Tags
NucleosomeDNA histone ComplexHistone CoreOctamerH2AH2BH3H4Polymerase EnzymesTranscriptionReplicationHistone FoldHistone DimerizationChromatin AssemblyHistone ModificationsAcetylationMethylationPhosphorylationHistone Variants

Du chapitre 5:

article

Now Playing

5.6 : The Nucleosome Core Particle

Cells and their Components

791 Vues

article

5.1 : Que sont les cellules ?

Cells and their Components

1.7K Vues

article

5.2 : Diversité cellulaire

Cells and their Components

2.7K Vues

article

5.3 : Cytoplasme

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.4 : Le Noyau

Cells and their Components

1.2K Vues

article

5.5 : Le nucléosome

Cells and their Components

1.2K Vues

article

5.7 : Emballage de la chromatine

Cells and their Components

16.4K Vues

article

5.8 : Le réticulum endoplasmique

Cells and their Components

1.4K Vues

article

5.9 : Appareil de Golgi

Cells and their Components

1.8K Vues

article

5.10 : Lysosomes

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.11 : Mitochondrie

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.12 : Membranes mitochondriales

Cells and their Components

926 Vues

article

5.13 : Peroxysomes

Cells and their Components

817 Vues

article

5.14 : Ribosomes

Cells and their Components

1.5K Vues

article

5.15 : La structure du protéasome

Cells and their Components

615 Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.