Jackson D A
Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, UK.
Bioessays. 1991 Jan;13(1):1-10. doi: 10.1002/bies.950130102.
It may be that eukaryotic nuclei contain a collection of operationally independent units (genes), each controlled through its interactions with soluble protein factors which diffuse at random throughout the nucleoplasmic space. Alternatively, nuclei might be organized in such a sophisticated fashion that specific genes occupy distinct sites and that spatially ordered RNA synthesis, processing and transport delivers mature RNAs to predestined sites in the cytoplasm. Different fields of research support each of these extreme views. Molecular biologists inspecting the precise details of specific interactions, usually in vitro, inevitably favour the former, while cell biologists working with far more complicated systems generally assume that more elaborate arrangements exist. In considering the importance of nuclear architecture, I have attempted to relate a collection of experiments each of which intimates some close relationship between structural aspects of chromatin organization and the precise mechanisms underlying nuclear function. I will argue that higher-order structures are crucial for achieving the observed efficiency and coordination of many nuclear processes.
真核细胞核可能包含一组操作上独立的单元(基因),每个单元通过与可溶性蛋白质因子的相互作用来控制,这些因子在核质空间中随机扩散。或者,细胞核可能以一种非常复杂的方式组织起来,使得特定的基因占据不同的位点,并且空间有序的RNA合成、加工和运输将成熟的RNA输送到细胞质中的预定位点。不同的研究领域支持这两种极端观点中的每一种。分子生物学家通常在体外检查特定相互作用的精确细节,不可避免地倾向于前者,而研究更为复杂系统的细胞生物学家一般认为存在更精细的排列方式。在考虑核结构的重要性时,我试图将一系列实验联系起来,每个实验都暗示了染色质组织的结构方面与核功能潜在精确机制之间的某种密切关系。我将论证,高阶结构对于实现许多核过程所观察到的效率和协调性至关重要。