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nucleoproteins

Nucleoproteins are complexes formed by a nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) bound to one or more proteins. The term encompasses chromatin-associated protein complexes, RNA-binding protein assemblies, and viral proteins that package genomes. In cells, nucleoproteins play essential roles in packaging, protection, replication, transcription, and RNA processing.

In eukaryotes, the most familiar nucleoprotein organization is chromatin. DNA wraps around a core of histone

Ribonucleoproteins are another major class of nucleoproteins, where proteins associate with RNA to perform diverse cellular

In virology, nucleoproteins often refer to viral proteins that bind and protect the genome, forming the nucleocapsid.

Overall, nucleoproteins illustrate how nucleic acids function in concert with proteins to regulate the structure and

proteins
to
form
nucleosomes,
the
basic
units
of
chromatin.
The
core
octamer
consists
of
two
each
of
histones
H2A,
H2B,
H3,
and
H4,
around
which
about
146
base
pairs
of
DNA
are
wound.
Histone
H1
helps
compact
chromatin
by
binding
linker
DNA.
Post-translational
modifications
of
histones
regulate
access
to
genetic
information,
influencing
transcription,
replication,
and
repair.
tasks.
Examples
include
ribosomes
(ribosomal
RNA
with
ribosomal
proteins)
for
protein
synthesis;
small
nuclear
RNPs
(snRNPs)
and
other
RNPs
involved
in
RNA
splicing;
small
nucleolar
RNPs
(snoRNPs)
that
modify
rRNA;
and
hnRNPs
that
participate
in
RNA
processing
and
transport.
Telomerase
is
a
notable
RNP
consisting
of
an
RNA
component
and
protein
subunits
that
extend
chromosome
ends.
These
proteins
shield
viral
RNA
or
DNA
from
degradation
and
coordinate
replication,
transcription,
and
assembly
of
new
virions.
Examples
include
influenza
nucleoprotein
and
coronavirus
nucleocapsid
proteins.
flow
of
genetic
information.