
doi: 10.1007/bf02451790
pmid: 1337883
We operationally define two forms of SV40 minichromosomes, a 75S-form, prepared at low salt concentration, referred to as native minichromosomes, and a 50S-form, obtained after treatment with 0.5 M potassium acetate, the salt-treated minichromosomes. Both preparations of minichromosomes serve well as templates for replication in vitro. Their respective replication products are strikingly different: replicated native minichromosomes contain a densely packed array of the maximal number of nucleosomes whereas replicated salt-treated minichromosomes carry, on average, half of the maximal number. We conclude that in both cases parental nucleosomes are transferred to progeny DNA, and, in addition, that an assembly of new nucleosomes occurs during the replication of native minichromosomes. This is apparently due to the presence of a nucleosome assembly factor as a constituent of native minichromosomes that dissociates upon treatment with salt. We further show that preparations of minichromosomes usually contain significant amounts of copurifying hnRNP particles and SV40 virion precursor particles. However, these structures do not detectably affect the replication and the chromatin assembly reactions.
DNA Replication, Models, Genetic, Simian virus 40, Acetates, Chromatin, Chromosomes, Nucleosomes, Nucleoproteins, DNA, Viral, Acetic Acid
DNA Replication, Models, Genetic, Simian virus 40, Acetates, Chromatin, Chromosomes, Nucleosomes, Nucleoproteins, DNA, Viral, Acetic Acid
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