| Literature DB >> 27526722 |
Gergely Nagy1,2, Erik Czipa1, László Steiner3, Tibor Nagy4,5, Sándor Pongor6, László Nagy1,2, Endre Barta7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: ChIP-seq provides a wealth of information on the approximate location of DNA-binding proteins genome-wide. It is known that the targeted motifs in most cases can be found at the peak centers. A high resolution mapping of ChIP-seq peaks could in principle allow the fine mapping of the protein constituents within protein complexes, but the current ChIP-seq analysis pipelines do not target the basepair resolution strand specific mapping of peak summits.Entities:
Keywords: CTCF; ChIP-seq; DNA loop; cohesin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27526722 PMCID: PMC4986361 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-016-2940-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1The shift between CTCF and cohesin bound sites. (a) The scatter plot shows the maxima of ChIP fragment coverage of CTCF, RAD21, SMC1/3 and STAG1 on CTSs specific for the given human cell or tissue type (Methods). The vertical axis shows the maxima of the average fragment depth and their position relative to the midpoint of CTSs is represented on the horizontal axis. HeLa results are marked with black border. (b) Distribution of the CTCF/cohesin proteins relative to the midpoint of 21,994 individual CTSs in HeLa cell line. Top: Histogram of summit distribution of the CTCF and cohesin bound sites using a 5 bp sliding window. Middle: Box plots indicate the mean (shown as ‘+’) and median (vertical line) peak summit positions of CTCF, SMC3 and RAD21 bound regions. The bottom panel shows the mapping on the CTCF motif logo (see Methods). (c) Distance distribution of cohesin proteins relative to the CTCF. Horizontal axis represents the distance of RAD21 (blue curve) and SMC3 summits (green curve) relative to the CTCF summits (orange line) and vertical axis represents the distance frequency. Rolling mean with 5 bp window was applied to smooth the frequency curves
Fig. 2Transforming the shift values into the B-DNA. (a) Mapping the peak shift values of the cohesin components onto a schematic circle diagram of B-DNA (representing the top view of the helix) shows that CTCF, RAD21 and STAG1/2 map on one face of the helix while SMC1 and SMC3 map on the other face. (b) 3D arrangement of CTCF/cohesin complex on the DNA helix. The binding positions correspond to the median values indicated in Fig. 1
Fig. 3The “double embrace” model of DNA loop closure. The topology of the cohesin ring is derived from the positional values (Fig. 1) and the 3D arrangement (Fig. 2). The model explains how a DNA-loop is fixed by flanking CTCF/cohesin complexes