Scanning force microscopy (SFM) is a new method to obtain the topography of surfaces with nanometer-resolution. The ability to image under liquids makes the technique attractive for biological applications, especially for the determination of the ultrastructure of biomolecules under native conditions. One growing field of interest is the investigation of chromatin and chromatin-related structures. Different levels of chromatin condensation were the subject of several previous SFM investigations, from the nucleosomal chain, to the 30-nm fiber, ending with the metaphase chromosome. The SFM yielded new information on such fundamental problems as the core spacing of the nucleosomal chain, the internal structure of the 30-nm fiber and the bandin...
Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop: Scanning Probe Microscopies and Molecular Mater...
Since the first discoveries of Schneider and Flemming, several papers have been published on chromos...
AbstractIn the recent years it has become clear that our genome is not randomly organized and its ar...
The purpose of this review is to discuss the achievements and progress that has been made in the use...
The surface structure of mitotic barley chromatin was studied by field-emission scanning electron mi...
ABSTRACT: We have found that the atomic force microscope (AFM) can be used to image the “beads-on-a-...
In eukaryotic cells, DNA is packaged as chromatin, a highly ordered structure formed through the wra...
Scanning force microscopy (SFM) was used for ultrastructural characterization of transcriptionally a...
Recent data on the AFM studies of nucleoprotein complexes of different types are reviewed in this pa...
In the last two decades, the development of the atomic force microscope has progressed hand-in-hand ...
We have used the recently developed MAC Mode Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) that operates in aqueous ...
Intact rDNA minichromosomes from Tetrahymena thermophila were isolated as native chromatin and image...
The scanning force microscope (SFM) yields the topography of the investigated surface. A procedure w...
abstract: In eukaryotes, DNA is packed in a highly condensed and hierarchically organized structure ...
Investigations of the structures of complex macromolecular assemblies (like chromatin fibers, microt...
Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop: Scanning Probe Microscopies and Molecular Mater...
Since the first discoveries of Schneider and Flemming, several papers have been published on chromos...
AbstractIn the recent years it has become clear that our genome is not randomly organized and its ar...
The purpose of this review is to discuss the achievements and progress that has been made in the use...
The surface structure of mitotic barley chromatin was studied by field-emission scanning electron mi...
ABSTRACT: We have found that the atomic force microscope (AFM) can be used to image the “beads-on-a-...
In eukaryotic cells, DNA is packaged as chromatin, a highly ordered structure formed through the wra...
Scanning force microscopy (SFM) was used for ultrastructural characterization of transcriptionally a...
Recent data on the AFM studies of nucleoprotein complexes of different types are reviewed in this pa...
In the last two decades, the development of the atomic force microscope has progressed hand-in-hand ...
We have used the recently developed MAC Mode Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) that operates in aqueous ...
Intact rDNA minichromosomes from Tetrahymena thermophila were isolated as native chromatin and image...
The scanning force microscope (SFM) yields the topography of the investigated surface. A procedure w...
abstract: In eukaryotes, DNA is packed in a highly condensed and hierarchically organized structure ...
Investigations of the structures of complex macromolecular assemblies (like chromatin fibers, microt...
Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop: Scanning Probe Microscopies and Molecular Mater...
Since the first discoveries of Schneider and Flemming, several papers have been published on chromos...
AbstractIn the recent years it has become clear that our genome is not randomly organized and its ar...