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. 1978 Feb;13(2):281-93.
doi: 10.1016/0092-8674(78)90197-6.

Nucleosomal DNA is digested to repeats of 10 bases by exonuclease III

Nucleosomal DNA is digested to repeats of 10 bases by exonuclease III

D Riley et al. Cell. 1978 Feb.

Abstract

Nucleosomes were treated with increasing concentrations of exonuclease III (Exo III) from E. coli. At low levels of Exo III, the heterogeneous distribution of monomers (with associated DNA fragments ranging in size between 140 and 170 bp) is "trimmed" down to a discrete core of 140 bp. The "trimming" of monomers to 140 bp results from a 3' exonucleolytic digestion accompanied by a 5' clipping activity which is specific for the conformation of internucleosomal DNA. At higher concentrations of Exo III, the enzyme digests the 140 bp "trimmed" nucleosome core from both 3' ends without associated 5' nuclease activity. Most striking is the observation that the fragments produced during such a digestion display discrete single-stranded lengths that are integer multiples of 10 bases. For some dimer nucleosomes, Exo III can digest as many as 200 bases from at least one 3' end and produce a 10 base interval ladder from about 400 bases down to 180 bases. This suggests that the enzyme can traverse the length of an entire nucleosome without destroying whatever structural features are necessary to produce a 10 base DNA ladder.

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