Abstract
About
six billion base pairs of DNA reside highly orderly in
each human cell’s nucleus through their manifestation as twenty-three pairs of
chromosomes. Delicate patterns of spatial organizations of DNA macromolecules
in these eukaryotic chromosomes as well as their associated physical driving
forces have, however, not been fully understood thus far. On the basis of (1) our four
recent discoveries about supercoiling properties of histone H1, nucleosomes,
linker DNA and polynucleosomes and (2) well-established axioms about signs,
shapes and handedness of DNA supercoils, we formulate new theories and models
of eukaryotic chromosomal structures. It is our conclusion that three-dimensional
structures of eukaryotic chromosomes and their sublevel architectures are govern
mainly by negative supercoils that are present in their naked linker DNA
regions.