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Science 29 November 1974:
Vol. 186. no. 4166, pp. 832 - 833
DOI: 10.1126/science.186.4166.832

Articles

Intranuclear Localization of Mercury in vivo

Sara E. Bryan 1, Charles Lambert 1, Kenneth J. Hardy 1, and Sam Simons 1

1 Department of Biological Sciences, University of New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana 70122

Purified nuclei isolated from mice challenged with nonlethal levels of mercury chloride (10-3M) in drinking water for 4 to 7 weeks (experimental) and from animals given deionized water (control) were fractionated and the subsequent fractions were analyzed for mercury by flameless atomic absorption. Control (active) euchromatin contained 1.75 ± 0.53 micrograms of mercury per milligram of DNA. There was a 12- to 15-fold enrichment of mercury in the euchromatin fraction of challenged animals. Mercury was not detected in control (inactive) heterochromatin, and only trace levels (parts per billion) appeared in experimental heterochromatin. It seems likely that mercury can be incorporated into chromatin as a metal-protein complex, but the possibility of protein-mercury-DNA or mercury-DNA complexes within euchromatin cannot be excluded.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Inaugural Article: Histone H3 variants and their potential role in indexing mammalian genomes: The "H3 barcode hypothesis".
S. B. Hake and C. D. Allis (2006)
PNAS 103, 6428-6435
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