| Literature DB >> 32209462 |
Raz Bar-Ziv1, Sagie Brodsky2, Michal Chapal2, Naama Barkai3.
Abstract
Genome replication perturbs the DNA regulatory environment by displacing DNA-bound proteins, replacing nucleosomes, and introducing dosage imbalance between regions replicating at different S-phase stages. Recently, we showed that these effects are integrated to maintain transcription homeostasis: replicated genes increase in dosage, but their expression remains stable due to replication-dependent epigenetic changes that suppress transcription. Here, we examine whether reduced transcription from replicated DNA results from limited accessibility to regulatory factors by measuring the time-resolved binding of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) and specific transcription factors (TFs) to DNA during S phase in budding yeast. We show that the Pol II binding pattern is largely insensitive to DNA dosage, indicating limited binding to replicated DNA. In contrast, binding of three TFs (Reb1, Abf1, and Rap1) to DNA increases with the increasing DNA dosage. We conclude that the replication-specific chromatin environment remains accessible to regulatory factors but suppresses RNA polymerase recruitment.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; RNA polymerase; chromatin; replication; transcription; transcription factor
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32209462 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.02.114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423