structure of metaphase chromosomes a role for effects of macromolecular crowding中期染色体结构大分子拥挤效应的作用.pdf
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Structure of Metaphase Chromosomes: A Role for Effects
of Macromolecular Crowding
Ronald Hancock*
ˆ ´ ´
Laval University Cancer Research Centre, Hotel-Dieu Hospital, Quebec, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
In metaphase chromosomes, chromatin is compacted to a concentration of several hundred mg/ml by mechanisms which
remain elusive. Effects mediated by the ionic environment are considered most frequently because mono- and di-valent
cations cause polynucleosome chains to form compact ,30-nm diameter fibres in vitro, but this conformation is not
detected in chromosomes in situ. A further unconsidered factor is predicted to influence the compaction of chromosomes,
namely the forces which arise from crowding by macromolecules in the surrounding cytoplasm whose measured
concentration is 100–200 mg/ml. To mimic these conditions, chromosomes were released from mitotic CHO cells in
solutions containing an inert volume-occupying macromolecule (8 kDa polyethylene glycol, 10.5 kDa dextran, or 70 kDa
Ficoll) in 100 mM K-Hepes buffer, with contaminating cations at only low micromolar concentrations. Optical and electron
microscopy showed that these chromosomes conserved their characteristic structure and compaction, and their volume
varied inversely with the concentration of a crowding macromolecule. They showed a canonical nucleosomal structure and
contained the characteristic proteins topoisomerase IIa and the condensin subunit SMC2. These observations, together with
evidence that the cytoplasm is crowded in vivo, suggest that macromolecular crowding effects should be considered a
significant and perhaps major factor in compacting chromosomes. This model may explain why ,30-nm
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