(516aj) Chemical Physics Of DNA Packaging In A Nucleosome Core Particle | AIChE

(516aj) Chemical Physics Of DNA Packaging In A Nucleosome Core Particle

Authors 

Sudhanshu, B. - Presenter, Stanford University


All of the processes necessary for the survival of a eukaryotic cell hinge on the cell's ability to store and read the genetic information encoded in its DNA. The daunting task of packaging its long DNA into a micron-sized nucleus is complicated by the necessity of maintaining the accessibility of the DNA to the cell's enzymatic machinery. The fundamental unit of packaged DNA, the nucleosome core particle, contains 146 base pairs of DNA wrapped 1.7 times around a cationic protein complex called the histone octamer. A string of nucleosomes is organized into higher-order structures at several hierarchical levels to form chromatin, a remarkable complex that is compact yet maintains accessibility for gene expression.

We develop a theoretical model of the nucleosome core particle in order to extract detailed quantitative information from single-molecule measurements of a single nucleosome under tension. We employ the wormlike chain model to describe the DNA strand as a thermally fluctuating polymer chain. The chain adsorbs on a spool that represents the histone octamer. This model is directly compared to single-molecule experiments conducted in Carlos Bustamante's lab; we find good agreement between our theory and the experimental data. Our model reveals the mechanism that underlies structural transitions that are apparent in the experimental measurements and predicts the conditions where these transitions occur. We proceed to construct a free energy surface to predict the dynamic response in a single-molecule experiment with a time-dependent rate of unwinding the nucleosome. The combination of single-molecule experiments and our theoretical modeling gives detailed information about the specific interactions between DNA and histone proteins as well as dynamic information about the accessibility of the packaged DNA.