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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4104

Kathleen Shupe and Peter J. Rizzo; Nuclease Digestion of Chromatin from the Eukaryotic Algae Olisthodiscus luteus, Peridinium balticum, and Crypthecodinium cohnii. J.Protozool. 30(3):599-606, 1983

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Chromatin from a uninucleate dinoflagellate, Crypthecodinium cohnii, a binucleate dinoflagellate, Peridinium balticum, and a chromophyte, Olisthodiscus luteus, was examined by nuclease digestion and the results were compared to those from vertebrates. Gel analysis of the products of staphylococcal (micrococcal) nuclease digestion revealed a DNA repeat unit of 220(+/-5) base pairs for O. luteus and 215(+/-5) for P. balticum. Limit digestion gave a core particle of 140 base pairs, revealing that these longer repeat sizes are due to longer linker regions. No repeating subunit structure was found upon electrophoresis of digests of C. cohnii nuclei. Examination of the DNA fragments produce by DNAse I digestion of nuclei isolated from P. balticum and O. luteus showed the same ladder of ten base multiples as seen in chromatin from other eukaryotes. Examination of the kinetics of digestion by DNAse II of Peridinium chromatin revealed less susceptibility when compared to DNAse I digestions while 70% of Olisthodiscus chromatin and 35% of C. cohnii chromatin was sensitive to DNAse II. These data, taken together with previous results from Euglena, indicate that while algal chromatin is similar to that of higher eukaryotes in regard to DNAse I and II action, it differs in that the linker DNA is longer. In addition, the HI-like histone from O. luteus and P. balticum is located in the linker DNA as in higher eukaryotes.