The histone extracted from calf thymus glands is a complex system of proteins, which can be fractionated by chromatography on carboxymethyl cellulose columns into three principal fractions (1) very lysine-rich, (2) moderately lysine-rich, (3) arginine-rich. When examined by starch gel chromatography each of these gives more than one band. Methods have been devised for further separation of the components in some cases. The components show characteristic differences in end groups and certain amino acids as well as in their basic character. Histones extracted from various rat tissues can be separated into similar fractions, of which the amino acid analyses are similar to those derived from calf thymus, within the experimental error. To this extent, no species or tissue specificity of the fractionated histones was observed. Although all the histone fractions contain approximately one basic amino acid to three non-basic amino acids their structure is not regular, as Phillips has shown that in certain fractions the number of non-basic groups between two basic groups may vary from 0 to seven or more. The possible functions of histones are discussed.
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1 March 1962
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March 01 1962
Some Researches on Histones
J. A. V. Butler
J. A. V. Butler
From The Chester Beatty Research Institute, Institute of Cancer Research, Royal Cancer Hospital, London, England
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J. A. V. Butler
From The Chester Beatty Research Institute, Institute of Cancer Research, Royal Cancer Hospital, London, England
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
Copyright, 1962, by The Rockefeller Institute Press.
1962
J Gen Physiol (1962) 45 (4): 195–203.
Citation
J. A. V. Butler; Some Researches on Histones . J Gen Physiol 1 March 1962; 45 (4): 195–203. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.45.4.195
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