Title: A Genomic Code for Nucleosome Positioning
1A Genomic Code for Nucleosome Positioning
Authors Segal E., Fondufe-Mittendorfe Y., Chen
L., Thastrom A., Field Y., Moore I. K., Wang
J.-P. Z., Widom J.
Presented by Apostol Gramada
2DNA organization Chromatin
Taken from http//sgi.bls.umkc.edu/waterborg/chro
mat/chroma09.html
3Nucleosome organization
4Nucleosome organization
- An octamer of 8 histone chains, 2 of each of the
following H2A, H2B, H3, H4.
- H3, H4 highly conserved in eukaryots.
- 147 bp per nucleosome
- DNA sharply bent and tightly wrapped in approx
1.7 turns around the histone core. - DNA bends discontinuously with the periodicity
of the helical repeat. - Bending is facilitated by certain dinucleotides
placed at the right positions.
5Nucleosome organization
- DNA in nucleosomes is far more sharply bent than
in unstressed naked DNA gt significant free
energy cost needed for stability. - Particular DNA sequence could reduce this cost
by - either having an inherent bendedness
- being more easily bendable (more flexible).
- The later seems to be more supported by
evidence. - The 10 bp periodicity of AA/TT, TA, GC seems to
be an especially flexible sequence motif.
6Nucleosome positioning
- DNA sequences differ in their ability to bend
sharply. This affects the DNA binding affinity of
the histone octamer. - In vitro studies show a wide range of affinities
with respect to sequence variability (approx
1000-fold). Some sequences highly preferred. - Is this mechanism used to control the access to
specific binding sites? - The positions of the nucleosomes may have
important inhibitory or facilitatory roles in
regulating gene expression.
7Nucleosome positioning current views
- Sequence preferences is over-ridden by
nucleosome remodeling complexes which move them
to new locations whenever needed. - Opposing view the remodeling complexes only
enable the nucleosomes to sample rapidly
alternative positions and therefore compete
efficiently with DNA binding proteins. They do
not determine their destination however. Then,
the genome would encode a nucleosome organization
intrinsic to the DNA sequence alone, comprising
sequences with both regions of low and high
affinity for nucleosomes. - The high affinity regions will be occupied in
vivo and the detailed distribution of nucleosome
positions will significantly influence the
chromosome functions genome-wide.
8Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
- The data 199 mono-nucleosome DNA sequences
(142-152 bp) from yeast. - Used to construct a probabilistic model
measuring the sequence preferences of yeast
nucleosome - Generate distribution functions at each site on
the nucleosome for all dinucloetides, from the
population of the 199 sequences. - A probability can then be assigned to each
sequence of 147 bp. - Derive a thermodynamic model for predicting the
nucleosome positions genome-wide from all legal
configurations of nucleosomes (no overlap, at
least 10 bp away).
9Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
10Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
11Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
12Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
13Validating a nucleosome-DNA interaction model
14Predicting nucleosome organization in genomic DNA
sequence
Resulting intrinsic nucleosome organizations
mutually exclusive organization dominate, a
single organization dominate, none dominates gt
may reveal potential regulatory role of
nucleosomes.
15Predicted nucleosome organization reflects in
vivo data
- Orange Data in vivo.
- 54 within 35 bp (only 39 by chance).
16Predicted nucleosome organization reflects in
vivo data
- Comparison to three genome-wide measurements
reveals - significant correspondence between predicted and
experimental nucleosome-depleted coding and
intergenic regions 68 of 57 depleted coding
regions and 76 of 294 depleted intergenic
regions. - strong correspondence with a higher resolution
nucleosome map 45 within 35bp distance (32 by
chance).
17Predicted nucleosome organization reflects in
vivo data
- Compared prediction of yeast model with one
using only nucleosome-bound sequence from chicken
18Predicted nucleosome organization reflects in
vivo data
19Global features of intrinsic nucleosome
organization in yeast
- From 11 mil positions gt 15800 stable ncls.
gt cover 20 of genome. ? array? - Fig d shows the distribution of pairwise
distances between stable ncls. gt periodicity of
177 bp extending over six positions ? higher
level chromatin organization?
20Nucleosome organization varies by type of genomic
region
- Centromer function requires enhanced stability
gt max occupancy - Highly expressed Ribosomal RNA and transfer RNA
gt low predicted occupancy - Genes that very their expression levels
(Ribosomal protein) in different conditions
requires other mechanisms.
21Nucleosomes facilitate their own remodeling
- Analyzing 1900 genes from a gene annotation
database and various studies shows significance
association with either high or low predicted
occupancy - In particular, the chromatin remodeling complex
RSC is associated with low occupancy gt genomes
facilitate their own remodeling
22Low nucleosome occupancy encoded at functional
binding sites
- Stable ncls. over non-functional sites gt
decrease accessibility to transcription factors. - Tests showed for 37 (out of 46) occupancy was
lower over functional sites than for
non-functional sites.
23Low nucleosome occupancy encoded at transcription
start sites
24Conclusions
- Nucleosome organization is encoded in eukaryotic
genome - The limited predictive power (50 of in vivo
nucleosome organization) is explained by a too
crude model yet - a more accurate nucleosome-DNA interaction model
- no account for favorable interactions and for
steric hindrances implied by the 3D ncls
structure - no account for competition with binding proteins.
25Math
WcS statistical weight of sequence S with
nucleosome configuration c.
Legal nucleosome configuration
26Math