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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America logoLink to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
. 1983 Nov;80(22):6887–6891. doi: 10.1073/pnas.80.22.6887

Specific DNA sequences associated with the nuclear matrix in synchronized mouse 3T3 cells.

G I Goldberg, I Collier, A Cassel
PMCID: PMC390091  PMID: 6580619

Abstract

Eukaryotic chromatin appears to be organized into arrays of supercoiled loops anchored to the scaffolding structure of the mitotic chromosome core or to the nuclear matrix of interphase nuclei. To reveal whether specific DNA sequences are involved in this level of chromatin organization, we isolated and cloned a population of DNA molecules [average length of 150 base pairs (bp)] closely associated with the nuclear matrix after exhaustive DNase digestion and subsequent extensive protease digestion. The nuclear matrix was obtained from murine BALB/c 3T3 cells synchronized at the G1/S border of the cell cycle. We report the structure of two sequences, designated G4 and G5, which are highly enriched in the matrix DNA. Sequence G4, of 152 bp, contains three 31-bp direct head-to-tail repeats. An 11-bp sequence at the end of each repeat is homologous to the first large tumor antigen recognition site of human papova virus. Sequence G5, of 135 bp, consists of two well-defined domains, in which the first domain is a fragment of the B1 repetitive sequence. The results suggest the possibility that the loops of histone-depleted chromatin are connected to the scaffold of the nuclear matrix, with specific DNA sequences at the anchorage sites.

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Selected References

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