ECB-ART-34947
Biochemistry
1983 Nov 22;2224:5626-31. doi: 10.1021/bi00293a026.
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Shortest nucleosomal repeat lengths during sea urchin development are found in two-cell embryos.
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Prior to fertilization, sperm possess one of the longest nucleosome repeat lengths yet determined [approximately 250 base pairs (bp) for the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus]. We show here that the two-cell embryo has an average repeat size of 189 +/- 2 bp as probed by micrococcal nuclease; this is the shortest average nucleosomal subunit reported for S. purpuratus. By the eight-cell stage, the average nucleosome repeat increases to 201 +/- 2 bp, and it subsequently increases further during development. These results indicate that a dramatic rearrangement of chromatin occurs upon fertilization and that this chromatin remodeling continues through early development. When two-cell embryos are labeled for 30 min with [3H]thymidine and digested briefly, they exhibit nuclease-hypersensitive fragments averaging 308 bp in size, which are consistent with the size of protected DNA units in replication intermediate complexes at blastula stage (as described by Levy and Jacob [Levy, A., & Jacob, K. M. (1978) Cell (Cambridge, Mass.) 14, 259]). Our results are consistent with two general propositions: (1) long repeat lengths are found in highly differentiated cells, and (2) short repeat lengths are characteristic of cells more active in cell division. Our data would also imply that a rapid increase in the DNA complement, e.g., in the transition from haploid to diploid state following fertilization, is accompanied by a shortening of the average size of DNA in a nucleosome after replication.
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Genes referenced: LOC100887844 LOC115919910