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Journal ArticleDOI

10 years of tension on chromatin: results from single molecule force spectroscopy.

Fan-Tso Chien, +1 more
- 31 Jul 2009 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 5, pp 474-485
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TLDR
Resolving force induced structural changes of chromatin fibers at the single molecule level will help to provide a physical understanding of processes involving chromatin that occur in vivo and will reveal the mechanical constraints that are relevant for processing and maintenance of DNA in eukaryotes.
Abstract
The compact, yet dynamic organization of chromatin plays an essential role in regulating gene expression. Although the static structure of chromatin fibers has been studied extensively, the controversy about the higher order folding remains. In the past ten years a number of studies have addressed chromatin folding with single molecule force spectroscopy. By manipulating chromatin fibers individually, the mechanical properties of the fibers were quantified with piconewton and nanometer accuracy. Here, we review the results of force induced chromatin unfolding and compare the differences between experimental conditions and single molecule manipulation techniques like force and position clamps. From these studies, five major features appeared upon forced extension of chromatin fibers: the elastic stretching of chromatin's higher order structure, the breaking of internucleosomal contacts, unwrapping of the first turn of DNA, unwrapping of the second turn of DNA, and the dissociation of histone octamers. These events occur sequentially at the increasing force. Resolving force induced structural changes of chromatin fibers at the single molecule level will help to provide a physical understanding of processes involving chromatin that occur in vivo and will reveal the mechanical constraints that are relevant for processing and maintenance of DNA in eukaryotes.

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New insights into nucleosome and chromatin structure: an ordered state or a disordered affair?

TL;DR: The compaction of genomic DNA into chromatin has profound implications for the regulation of key processes such as transcription, replication and DNA repair, and it is becoming clear that chromatin structures are not nearly as uniform and regular as previously assumed.
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Chromothripsis and Kataegis Induced by Telomere Crisis.

TL;DR: It is proposed that chromothripsis in human cancer may arise through TREX1-mediated fragmentation of dicentric chromosomes formed in telomere crisis through the generation of the ssDNA and the resolution of the chromatin bridges.
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Nucleosome structure(s) and stability: variations on a theme.

TL;DR: This review provides a brief historical account of how the overriding perception regarding aspects of nucleosome structure has changed over the past thirty years and discusses recent technical advances regarding nucleosomes structure and its physical characterization.
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Manipulation and Motion of Organelles and Single Molecules in Living Cells.

TL;DR: The most commonly used force spectroscopy techniques, namely optical tweezer, magnetic tweezers, and atomic force microscopy, are described in detail, and their strength and limitations related to in vivo experiments are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward Convergence of Experimental Studies and Theoretical Modeling of the Chromatin Fiber

TL;DR: This minireview discusses recent progress and evidence supporting structural heterogeneity in chromatin fibers, reconciling apparently contradictory fiber models.
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