Ch 8 Book Terms Flashcards
Nucleosome
The basic structural subunit of chromatin, consisting of approximately 200 bp of DNA and an octamer of histone proteins.
Histones
Conserved DNA-binding proteins that form the basic subunit of chromatin in eukaryotes. H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 form an octameric core around which DNA coils to form a nucleosome. Linker histones are external to the nucleosome.
Histone Tails
Flexible amino- or carboxy-terminal regions of the core histones that extend beyond the surface of the nucleosome; they are sites of extensive posttranslational modification.
10-nm Fiber
A linear array of nucleosomes generated by unfolding from the natural condition of chromatin.
Linker Histones
A family of histones (such as histone H1) that are not components of the nucleosome core; linker histones bind nucleosomes and/or linker DNA and promote 30-nm fiber formation.
30-nm Fiber
A coil of nucleosomes. It is the basic level of organization of nucleosomes in chromatin.
Nonhistones
Any structural protein found in a chromosome except one of the histones.
Micrococcal Nuclease (MNase)
An endonuclease that cleaves DNA; in chromatin, DNA is cleaved preferentially between nucleosomes.
Linker DNA
Nonnucleosomal DNA present between nucleosomes.
Core DNA
Region of nucleosomal DNA that has an invariant length of 146 bp, the minimum length of DNA needed to form a stable monomeric nucleosome, and is relatively resistant to digestion by nucleases.
Histone Octamer
The complex of two copies each of the four different core histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4); DNA wraps around this complex to form the nucleosome.
Core Histones
One of the four types of histone (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 and their variants) found in the core particle derived from the nucleosome. (This excludes linker histones.)
Histone Fold
A motif found in all four core histones in which three α-helices are connected by two loops.
Chromatosomes
Nucleosomes that contain linker histones.
Histone Code
The hypothesis that combinations of specific modifications on specific histone residues act cooperatively to define chromatin function.