Defined lengths of chromatin were prepared by brief digestion with micrococcal nuclease and fractionation in a sucrose gradient. A length containing a given number of 200 base pair repeating units appeared as the same number of 100 A beads in the electron microscope. The distance between beads within a length was small, usually less than about 20 A. Several independent lines of work have led to the idea of beadlike units in chromatin, but there is disagreement over the spacing and DNA content of the beads. Two models have been put forward. One stems from a particulate appearance of chromatin fibers in the electron microscope, observed by Olins and Olins (1) The aim of the work described here was to determine the relationship between the bead observed in the electron microscope and the 200 base pair repeating unit inferred from biochemical evidence. Counts of beads in chromatin containing defined lengths of DNA, in particular SV40 chromatin (12) and complexes formed in vitro between adenovirus DNA and histones (13), have suggested that the bead and the biochemical unit are the same. Chromatin containing defined lengths of DNA can also be obtained by brief digestion with micrococcal nuclease and fractionation in a sucrose gradient (11). Here we report the counts of beads in such fractions. In the course of this work we have also made measurements of inter-bead distances in an effort to decide between the extended and compact models described above.
MATERIALS AND METHODSChromatin (A26o = 46) was prepared as described (ref. 15, with the use of 110 units/ml of micrococcal nuclease for 2 min at 370 and lysis in half the stated volume of 0.2 mM NaEDTA) and 0.8 ml was layered on each of five 36.3 ml isokinetic sucrose gradients, containing 1 mM NaEDTA, pH 7, with ct = 5%, c, = 28.8% and Vm = 33 ml (16). The gradients were centrifuged for 22 hr at 27,000 rpm and 40 in a Beckman SW27 rotor, and analyzed with the use of a turbulence-free flow cell (Molecular Instruments Co, Evanston, Ill.). Corresponding fractions of the gradients (Fig. 2) were pooled, and dialyzed overnight against 1 mM NaEDTA, pH 7. The purity at this stage, determined as described in the text, was 95, 87, 78, and 67% for monomer, dimer, trimer and tetramer fractions. An aliquot (3 ml) of each fraction was further purified on a second sucrose gradient identical to the first.For electron microscopy, the purified fractions were dialyzed against 0.5 mM NaEDTA, pH 7, adjusted to the required ionic strength by the addition of ammonium acetate, and fixed if required in 5% formaldehyde, pH 7, for 5-10 min at 300. Drops of solutions were applied to thin carboncoated grids and the excess solution was withdrawn with an edge of filter paper.