Literature DB >> 25563930

Ubiquitous human 'master' origins of replication are encoded in the DNA sequence via a local enrichment in nucleosome excluding energy barriers.

Guénola Drillon1, Benjamin Audit, Françoise Argoul, Alain Arneodo.   

Abstract

As the elementary building block of eukaryotic chromatin, the nucleosome is at the heart of the compromise between the necessity of compacting DNA in the cell nucleus and the required accessibility to regulatory proteins. The recent availability of genome-wide experimental maps of nucleosome positions for many different organisms and cell types has provided an unprecedented opportunity to elucidate to what extent the DNA sequence conditions the primary structure of chromatin and in turn participates in the chromatin-mediated regulation of nuclear functions, such as gene expression and DNA replication. In this study, we use in vivo and in vitro genome-wide nucleosome occupancy data together with the set of nucleosome-free regions (NFRs) predicted by a physical model of nucleosome formation based on sequence-dependent bending properties of the DNA double-helix, to investigate the role of intrinsic nucleosome occupancy in the regulation of the replication spatio-temporal programme in human. We focus our analysis on the so-called replication U/N-domains that were shown to cover about half of the human genome in the germline (skew-N domains) as well as in embryonic stem cells, somatic and HeLa cells (mean replication timing U-domains). The 'master' origins of replication (MaOris) that border these megabase-sized U/N-domains were found to be specified by a few hundred kb wide regions that are hyper-sensitive to DNase I cleavage, hypomethylated, and enriched in epigenetic marks involved in transcription regulation, the hallmarks of localized open chromatin structures. Here we show that replication U/N-domain borders that are conserved in all considered cell lines have an environment highly enriched in nucleosome-excluding-energy barriers, suggesting that these ubiquitous MaOris have been selected during evolution. In contrast, MaOris that are cell-type-specific are mainly regulated epigenetically and are no longer favoured by a local abundance of intrinsic NFRs encoded in the DNA sequence. At the smaller few hundred bp scale of gene promoters, CpG-rich promoters of housekeeping genes found nearby ubiquitous MaOris as well as CpG-poor promoters of tissue-specific genes found nearby cell-type-specific MaOris, both correspond to in vivo NFRs that are not coded as nucleosome-excluding-energy barriers. Whereas the former promoters are likely to correspond to high occupancy transcription factor binding regions, the latter are an illustration that gene regulation in human is typically cell-type-specific.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25563930     DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/27/6/064102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Condens Matter        ISSN: 0953-8984            Impact factor:   2.333


  4 in total

1.  Distinct epigenetic features of differentiation-regulated replication origins.

Authors:  Owen K Smith; RyanGuk Kim; Haiqing Fu; Melvenia M Martin; Chii Mei Lin; Koichi Utani; Ya Zhang; Anna B Marks; Marc Lalande; Stormy Chamberlain; Maxwell W Libbrecht; Eric E Bouhassira; Michael C Ryan; William S Noble; Mirit I Aladjem
Journal:  Epigenetics Chromatin       Date:  2016-05-10       Impact factor: 4.954

2.  Evidence of selection for an accessible nucleosomal array in human.

Authors:  Guénola Drillon; Benjamin Audit; Françoise Argoul; Alain Arneodo
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2016-07-29       Impact factor: 3.969

3.  Multi-scale structural community organisation of the human genome.

Authors:  Rasha E Boulos; Nicolas Tremblay; Alain Arneodo; Pierre Borgnat; Benjamin Audit
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2017-04-11       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  Evidence for DNA Sequence Encoding of an Accessible Nucleosomal Array across Vertebrates.

Authors:  Frédéric G Brunet; Benjamin Audit; Guénola Drillon; Françoise Argoul; Jean-Nicolas Volff; Alain Arneodo
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2018-03-24       Impact factor: 4.033

  4 in total

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