The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation

Condensation of model chromatin in the form of fully saturated 12-mer nucleosome arrays, induced by addition of cationic ligands (ε-oligolysines with charge varied from +4 to +11), was studied in a range of KCl concentrations (10–500 mM) using light scattering and precipitation assay titrations. The...

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Main Authors: Korolev, Nikolay, Zhao, Yongqian, Allahverdi, Abdollah, Eom, Khee Dong, Nordenskiöld, Lars, Tam, James P.
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/99954
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11030
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-999542020-03-07T12:24:53Z The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation Korolev, Nikolay Zhao, Yongqian Allahverdi, Abdollah Eom, Khee Dong Nordenskiöld, Lars Tam, James P. School of Biological Sciences DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences Condensation of model chromatin in the form of fully saturated 12-mer nucleosome arrays, induced by addition of cationic ligands (ε-oligolysines with charge varied from +4 to +11), was studied in a range of KCl concentrations (10–500 mM) using light scattering and precipitation assay titrations. The dependence of EC50 (ligand concentration at the midpoint of the array condensation) on CKCl displays two regimes, a salt-independent at low CKCl and a salt-dependent at higher salt concentrations. In the salt-dependent regime EC50 rises sharply with increase of CKCl. Increase of ligand charge shifts the transition from the salt-independent to salt-dependent regime to higher salt. In the nucleosome array system, due to the partial neutralization of the DNA charge by histones, a lower oligocation concentration is needed to provoke condensation in the salt-independent regime compared to the related case of DNA condensation by the same cation. In the physiological range of salt concentrations (CKCl = 50–300 mM), K+ ions assist array condensation by shifting EC50 of the ε-oligolysines to lower values. At higher CKCl, K+ competes with the cationic ligands, which leads to increase of EC50. Values of salt-dependent dissociation constant for the ε-oligolysine–nucleosome array interaction were obtained, by fitting to a general equation developed earlier for DNA, describing the dependence of EC50 on dissociation constant, salt and polyelectrolyte concentrations. 2013-07-09T01:57:04Z 2019-12-06T20:13:59Z 2013-07-09T01:57:04Z 2019-12-06T20:13:59Z 2011 2011 Journal Article Korolev, N., Zhao, Y., Allahverdi, A., Eom, K. D., Tam, J. P., & Nordenskiöld, L. (2012). The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 418(2), 205–210. 0006-291X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/99954 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11030 10.1016/j.bbrc.2011.12.112 en Biochemical and biophysical research communications © 2011 Elsevier Inc.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences
Korolev, Nikolay
Zhao, Yongqian
Allahverdi, Abdollah
Eom, Khee Dong
Nordenskiöld, Lars
Tam, James P.
The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
description Condensation of model chromatin in the form of fully saturated 12-mer nucleosome arrays, induced by addition of cationic ligands (ε-oligolysines with charge varied from +4 to +11), was studied in a range of KCl concentrations (10–500 mM) using light scattering and precipitation assay titrations. The dependence of EC50 (ligand concentration at the midpoint of the array condensation) on CKCl displays two regimes, a salt-independent at low CKCl and a salt-dependent at higher salt concentrations. In the salt-dependent regime EC50 rises sharply with increase of CKCl. Increase of ligand charge shifts the transition from the salt-independent to salt-dependent regime to higher salt. In the nucleosome array system, due to the partial neutralization of the DNA charge by histones, a lower oligocation concentration is needed to provoke condensation in the salt-independent regime compared to the related case of DNA condensation by the same cation. In the physiological range of salt concentrations (CKCl = 50–300 mM), K+ ions assist array condensation by shifting EC50 of the ε-oligolysines to lower values. At higher CKCl, K+ competes with the cationic ligands, which leads to increase of EC50. Values of salt-dependent dissociation constant for the ε-oligolysine–nucleosome array interaction were obtained, by fitting to a general equation developed earlier for DNA, describing the dependence of EC50 on dissociation constant, salt and polyelectrolyte concentrations.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Korolev, Nikolay
Zhao, Yongqian
Allahverdi, Abdollah
Eom, Khee Dong
Nordenskiöld, Lars
Tam, James P.
format Article
author Korolev, Nikolay
Zhao, Yongqian
Allahverdi, Abdollah
Eom, Khee Dong
Nordenskiöld, Lars
Tam, James P.
author_sort Korolev, Nikolay
title The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
title_short The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
title_full The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
title_fullStr The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
title_full_unstemmed The effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
title_sort effect of salt on oligocation-induced chromatin condensation
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/99954
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11030
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