Digestion of chromatin with DNase (nucleate 3'-oligonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.7) releases 11-12S nucleoprotein particles. After extensive nuclease digestion, the DNA in these particles consists of a collection of eight discrete DNA fragments. When these nuclease-particles are treated with trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4), only 20 to 30 amino-acid residues are cleaved from histone Nterminals, the histone C-terminal segments being resistant. The resulting 5S nucleoprotein particles have now been shown on acrylamide gels to consist of a series of eight discrete DNA-containing bands. Four of these bands contain C-terminal cleavage fragments from four histones (III, IV, Ib2, and Ilbi) tightly bound to them; a fifth contains fragments from only histones III and IV. The remaining three bands contain only DNA. Since these protein-free DNA bands were resistant to nuclease prior to trypsin treatment, they were presumably associated with histone N-terminal segments in the native structure.Trypsin, therefore, appears to split nuclease-particlps, releasing two subfractions of DNA-one associated with protein, the other not. The data is compatible with a model in which the majority of DNA in the eukaryotic nucleus is folded into hairpin loops of double-stranded helix, each created by the concerted cross-linking action of 6 to 10 histones which interact to form a trypsin-resistant complex composed, for the most part, of all four major histones. These loops may further fold upon themselves to form the "nu" bodies that have been visualized by electron microscopy.The DNA in chromatin is digested by staphylococcal nuclease (nucleate 3'-oligonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.7) into eight discrete, limit-digest DNA fragments (1, 2), which range in size between 45 and 145 base pairs. Yet, partial staphylococcal nuclease digestion results in the appearance of transient DNA fragments of 200 base pairs or integer multiples of that size (3,4). A reasonable interpretation of these findings is that these larger transient segments are generated by a regular arrangement of very accessible, DNase-sensitive sites, while the eight bands of the limit-digest are generated by the further digestion of less accessible but discrete sites within each 200-base-pair repeat. Recent electron microscope data has shown that "bead-like" structures occur at regular intervals of about 200 base pairs along the extended chromosome fiber (5). It is thus tempting to consider that the initial nuclease cut is between these so-called "nu" bodies (5), and that further digestion introduces a limited number of specific cuts within each "nu" body.Exhaustive treatment of chick erythrocyte chromatin with trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) results in the complete digestion of histones I and V and the cleavage of only 20 to 30 amino-acid residues from the positively charged N-terminal parts of histones III, IV, IIb2, and (possibly) IHbl (2). In this comAbbreviations: ST, produced by treatment with staphylococcal nuclease followed by trypsin; TS, trypsin followed by nuclease. munication I...