Electron micrograph of chromatin
demonstrating "beads on a string" (credit)
There are approximately 6 billion base pairs of DNA that make up a diploid human genome. This stretches to over 2 meters of DNA that must fit into a single cell. During the 1900s many scientists sought to uncover how DNA packaged into a single cell through x-ray diffraction studies. However, it wasn't until 1974 when Olins used electron microscopy to demonstrate the packaged nature of chromatin as beads on a string. This provided the first evidence that nucleosomes existed. A year later in 1975, Thomas and Kornberg demonstrated that repeating histone octamers comprised of H2A, H2B, H3 and H4 were present throughout a chromatin fiber and could be a means of further packaging DNA. Together these papers laid the foundational work for how DNA is packaged.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.