Anmelden

Human DNA is almost two meters long. However, it is compressed inside a tiny nucleus measuring only a few microns in diameter. To make this degree of compaction possible, DNA is organized into several sequential levels so that it can fit into such a tiny space. The most compact form of DNA is a chromosome that can be seen under a microscope in a dividing cell.

In a chromosome, DNA is wound twice around a protein complex called a histone octamer core, which consists of 8 histone proteins. This DNA and histone protein complex together forms the nucleosome, the fundamental and functional unit of DNA compaction. Nucleosomes can further coil around themselves into higher-order compact structures.

Histones are highly conserved proteins.

The amino acid sequences of core histone proteins are highly conserved even between distantly related species. For example, the amino acid sequence of the H3 histone between a calf thymus and a pea plant has only four amino acid differences.

Non-histone proteins

The nucleosome complex is also bound by a small proportion of non-histone proteins, which help maintain the compaction and organize long chromatin loops. Non-histone proteins are also involved in regulating DNA replication and RNA synthesis.

Tags

NucleosomeDNA CompactionChromosomeHistone OctamerHistone ProteinsCore HistonesNon histone ProteinsChromatin LoopsDNA ReplicationRNA Synthesis

Aus Kapitel 5:

article

Now Playing

5.5 : The Nucleosome

Cells and their Components

1.2K Ansichten

article

5.1 : What are Cells?

Cells and their Components

1.7K Ansichten

article

5.2 : Cell Diversity

Cells and their Components

2.8K Ansichten

article

5.3 : Cytoplasm

Cells and their Components

1.5K Ansichten

article

5.4 : The Nucleus

Cells and their Components

1.2K Ansichten

article

5.6 : The Nucleosome Core Particle

Cells and their Components

798 Ansichten

article

5.7 : Chromatin Packaging

Cells and their Components

16.5K Ansichten

article

5.8 : The Endoplasmic Reticulum

Cells and their Components

1.4K Ansichten

article

5.9 : Golgi Apparatus

Cells and their Components

1.8K Ansichten

article

5.10 : Lysosomes

Cells and their Components

1.6K Ansichten

article

5.11 : Mitochondria

Cells and their Components

1.5K Ansichten

article

5.12 : Mitochondrial Membranes

Cells and their Components

928 Ansichten

article

5.13 : Peroxisomes

Cells and their Components

822 Ansichten

article

5.14 : Ribosomes

Cells and their Components

1.5K Ansichten

article

5.15 : The Proteasome Structure

Cells and their Components

632 Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten