Biology, asked by jaideepreddy1370, 1 year ago

In between two nucleosomes, how many nucleotide pairs are present
A) 5 to 15
B) 15 to 100
C) 100 to 200
D) 200 to 400

Answers

Answered by msdhoni5
0
A nucleosome is a basic unit of DNApackaging in eukaryotes, consisting of a segment of DNA wound in sequence around eight[1] histone protein cores.[2] This structure is often compared to thread wrapped around a spool.[3]

Nucleosomes form the fundamental repeating units of eukaryotic chromatin,[4] which is used to pack the large eukaryotic genomes into the nucleus while still ensuring appropriate access to it (in mammalian cells approximately 2 m of linear DNA have to be packed into a nucleus of roughly 10 µm diameter). Nucleosomes are folded through a series of successively higher order structures to eventually form a chromosome; this both compacts DNA and creates an added layer of regulatory control, which ensures correct gene expression. Nucleosomes are thought to carry epigenetically inherited information in the form of covalent modifications of their core histones. Nucleosomes were observed as particles in the electron microscope by Don and Ada Olins in 1974,[5] and their existence and structure (as histone octamers surrounded by approximately 200 base pairs of DNA) were proposed by Roger Kornberg.[6][7] The role of the nucleosome as a general gene repressor was demonstrated by Lorch et al. in vitro,[8] and by Han and Grunstein in vivo in 1987 and 1988, respectively.[9]

Similar questions