Changes in the molecular structure of mouse fetal astrocyte nucleosomes produced in Vitro by methylmercuric chloride

Environmental Research(1986)

Cited 10|Views1
No score
Abstract
The fluorescent probe N -(3-pyrene)maleimide, which specifically labels the cysteine residues of histone H3 within the nucleosome, was used to monitor changes in the nucleosomal structure of mouse fetal astrocytes exposed to varying concentrations of methylmercuric chloride. Methylmercuric chloride treatment (10 μ m ) for 6 hr produced a significant decrease in the degree of fluorescence of the probe. The decrease was much smaller following a 4-hr incubation period. These results correlate with recent observations showing that significant changes in the thymidine labeling index occur following 4–6 hr of exposure to methylmercury (MeHg). It is hypothesized that MeHg enters the cells during the growth phase and attaches to the protein moiety of the nucleosome in or near the cysteine groups of histone H3, thus diminishing the binding capacity of the fluorescent probe. Addition of a detergent (sodium dodecyl sulfate) resulted in only a small increase in the degree of fluorescence of the treated nucleosomes as compared to controls, showing that the interaction of MeHg with the nuclear proteins was not dissociated by detergent. In view of the strong interaction between DNA and the histone dimer H3–H4 and the potential importance of the latter in gene regulation, these results suggest an additional means by which MeHg may exert its toxic effects.
More
Translated text
Key words
molecular structure,nucleic acid,membrane transport,gene regulation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined