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Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence

The large amount of non-coding DNA present in mammalian genomes suggests that some of it may play a structural or functional role. We provide evidence that it is possible to predict computationally, from the DNA sequence, loci in mouse liver nuclei that possess distinctive nucleosome arrays. We test...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cioffi, Alfred, Fleury, Tomara J., Stein, Arnold
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1435979/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16614447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl078
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author Cioffi, Alfred
Fleury, Tomara J.
Stein, Arnold
author_facet Cioffi, Alfred
Fleury, Tomara J.
Stein, Arnold
author_sort Cioffi, Alfred
collection PubMed
description The large amount of non-coding DNA present in mammalian genomes suggests that some of it may play a structural or functional role. We provide evidence that it is possible to predict computationally, from the DNA sequence, loci in mouse liver nuclei that possess distinctive nucleosome arrays. We tested the hypothesis that a 100 kb region of DNA possessing a strong, in-phase, dinucleosome period oscillation in the motif period-10 non-T, A/T, G, should generate a nucleosome array with a nucleosome repeat that is one-half of the dinucleosome oscillation period value, as computed by Fourier analysis of the sequence. Ten loci with short repeats, that would be readily distinguishable from the pervasive bulk repeat, were predicted computationally and then tested experimentally. We estimated experimentally that less than 20% of the chromatin in mouse liver nuclei has a nucleosome repeat length that is 15 bp, or more, shorter than the bulk repeat value of 195 ± bp. All 10 computational predictions were confirmed experimentally with high statistical significance. Nucleosome repeats as short as 172 ± 5 bp were observed for the first time in mouse liver chromatin. These findings may be useful for identifying distinctive chromatin structures computationally from the DNA sequence.
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spelling pubmed-14359792006-04-25 Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence Cioffi, Alfred Fleury, Tomara J. Stein, Arnold Nucleic Acids Res Article The large amount of non-coding DNA present in mammalian genomes suggests that some of it may play a structural or functional role. We provide evidence that it is possible to predict computationally, from the DNA sequence, loci in mouse liver nuclei that possess distinctive nucleosome arrays. We tested the hypothesis that a 100 kb region of DNA possessing a strong, in-phase, dinucleosome period oscillation in the motif period-10 non-T, A/T, G, should generate a nucleosome array with a nucleosome repeat that is one-half of the dinucleosome oscillation period value, as computed by Fourier analysis of the sequence. Ten loci with short repeats, that would be readily distinguishable from the pervasive bulk repeat, were predicted computationally and then tested experimentally. We estimated experimentally that less than 20% of the chromatin in mouse liver nuclei has a nucleosome repeat length that is 15 bp, or more, shorter than the bulk repeat value of 195 ± bp. All 10 computational predictions were confirmed experimentally with high statistical significance. Nucleosome repeats as short as 172 ± 5 bp were observed for the first time in mouse liver chromatin. These findings may be useful for identifying distinctive chromatin structures computationally from the DNA sequence. Oxford University Press 2006 2006-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC1435979/ /pubmed/16614447 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl078 Text en © The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Cioffi, Alfred
Fleury, Tomara J.
Stein, Arnold
Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title_full Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title_fullStr Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title_short Aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the DNA sequence
title_sort aspects of large-scale chromatin structures in mouse liver nuclei can be predicted from the dna sequence
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1435979/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16614447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl078
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