Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective

‘Epichromatin’, the surface of chromatin beneath the interphase nuclear envelope (NE) or at the surface of mitotic chromosomes, was discovered by immunostaining with a specific bivalent mouse monoclonal anti-nucleosome antibody (mAb PL2-6). ‘Chromomeres’, punctate chromatin particles approximately 2...

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Main Authors: Donald E. Olins, Ada L. Olins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2018-06-01
Series:Open Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.180058
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spelling doaj-0094c95286e74da4bd210cae869d312d2020-11-25T03:00:08ZengThe Royal SocietyOpen Biology2046-24412018-06-018610.1098/rsob.180058180058Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspectiveDonald E. OlinsAda L. Olins‘Epichromatin’, the surface of chromatin beneath the interphase nuclear envelope (NE) or at the surface of mitotic chromosomes, was discovered by immunostaining with a specific bivalent mouse monoclonal anti-nucleosome antibody (mAb PL2-6). ‘Chromomeres’, punctate chromatin particles approximately 200–300 nm in diameter, identified throughout the interphase chromatin and along mitotic chromosomes, were observed by immunostaining with the monovalent papain-derived Fab fragments of bivalent PL2-6. The specific target for PL2-6 appears to include the nucleosome acidic patch. Thus, within the epichromatin and chromomeric regions, this epitope is ‘exposed’. Considering that histones possess unstructured ‘tails’ (i.e. intrinsically disordered peptide regions, IDPR), our perception of these chromatin regions becomes more ‘fuzzy’ (less defined). We suggest that epichromatin cationic tails facilitate interactions with anionic components of NE membranes. We also suggest that the unstructured histone tails (especially, histone H1 tails), with their presumed promiscuous binding, establish multivalent binding that stabilizes each chromomere as a unit of chromatin higher order structure. We propose an ‘unstructured stability’ hypothesis, which postulates that the stability of epichromatin and chromomeres (as well as other nuclear chromatin structures) is a consequence of the collective contributions of numerous weak histone IDPR binding interactions arising from the multivalent nucleosome, analogous to antibody avidity.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.180058histonesnucleosomesintrinsically disordered regionsavidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donald E. Olins
Ada L. Olins
spellingShingle Donald E. Olins
Ada L. Olins
Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
Open Biology
histones
nucleosomes
intrinsically disordered regions
avidity
author_facet Donald E. Olins
Ada L. Olins
author_sort Donald E. Olins
title Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
title_short Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
title_full Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
title_fullStr Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
title_full_unstemmed Epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
title_sort epichromatin and chromomeres: a ‘fuzzy’ perspective
publisher The Royal Society
series Open Biology
issn 2046-2441
publishDate 2018-06-01
description ‘Epichromatin’, the surface of chromatin beneath the interphase nuclear envelope (NE) or at the surface of mitotic chromosomes, was discovered by immunostaining with a specific bivalent mouse monoclonal anti-nucleosome antibody (mAb PL2-6). ‘Chromomeres’, punctate chromatin particles approximately 200–300 nm in diameter, identified throughout the interphase chromatin and along mitotic chromosomes, were observed by immunostaining with the monovalent papain-derived Fab fragments of bivalent PL2-6. The specific target for PL2-6 appears to include the nucleosome acidic patch. Thus, within the epichromatin and chromomeric regions, this epitope is ‘exposed’. Considering that histones possess unstructured ‘tails’ (i.e. intrinsically disordered peptide regions, IDPR), our perception of these chromatin regions becomes more ‘fuzzy’ (less defined). We suggest that epichromatin cationic tails facilitate interactions with anionic components of NE membranes. We also suggest that the unstructured histone tails (especially, histone H1 tails), with their presumed promiscuous binding, establish multivalent binding that stabilizes each chromomere as a unit of chromatin higher order structure. We propose an ‘unstructured stability’ hypothesis, which postulates that the stability of epichromatin and chromomeres (as well as other nuclear chromatin structures) is a consequence of the collective contributions of numerous weak histone IDPR binding interactions arising from the multivalent nucleosome, analogous to antibody avidity.
topic histones
nucleosomes
intrinsically disordered regions
avidity
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.180058
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