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Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks

Introducing a new method to visualize large stretches of genomic DNA (see Appendix S1) the article reports that most GA-sequences [1] shared chains of tetra-GA-motifs and contained upstream poly(A)-segments. Although not integral parts of them, Alu-elements were found immediately upstream of all hum...

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Autor principal: Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2651618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19270754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004701
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author Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter
author_facet Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter
author_sort Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter
collection PubMed
description Introducing a new method to visualize large stretches of genomic DNA (see Appendix S1) the article reports that most GA-sequences [1] shared chains of tetra-GA-motifs and contained upstream poly(A)-segments. Although not integral parts of them, Alu-elements were found immediately upstream of all human and chimpanzee GA-sequences with an upstream poly(A)-segment. The article hypothesizes that genome navigation uses these properties of GA-sequences in the following way. (1) Poly(A) binding proteins interact with the upstream poly(A)-segments and arrange adjacent GA-sequences side-by-side (‘GA-ribbon’), while folding the intervening DNA sequences between them into loops (‘associated DNA-loops’). (2) Genome navigation uses the GA-ribbon as a search path for specific target genes that is up to 730-fold shorter than the full-length chromosome. (3) As to the specificity of the search, each molecule of a target protein is assumed to catalyze the formation of specific oligomers from a set of transcription factors that recognize tetra-GA-motifs. Their specific combinations of tetra-GA motifs are assumed to be present in the particular GA-sequence whose associated loop contains the gene for the target protein. As long as the target protein is abundant in the cell it produces sufficient numbers of such oligomers which bind to their specific GA-sequences and, thereby, inhibit locally the transcription of the target protein in the associated loop. However, if the amount of target protein drops below a certain threshold, the resultant reduction of specific oligomers leaves the corresponding GA-sequence ‘denuded’. In response, the associated DNA-loop releases its nucleosomes and allows transcription of the target protein to proceed. (4) The Alu-transcripts may help control the general background of protein synthesis proportional to the number of transcriptionally active associated loops, especially in stressed cells. (5) The model offers a new mechanism of co-regulation of protein synthesis based on the shared segments of different GA-sequences.
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spelling pubmed-26516182009-03-09 Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter PLoS One Research Article Introducing a new method to visualize large stretches of genomic DNA (see Appendix S1) the article reports that most GA-sequences [1] shared chains of tetra-GA-motifs and contained upstream poly(A)-segments. Although not integral parts of them, Alu-elements were found immediately upstream of all human and chimpanzee GA-sequences with an upstream poly(A)-segment. The article hypothesizes that genome navigation uses these properties of GA-sequences in the following way. (1) Poly(A) binding proteins interact with the upstream poly(A)-segments and arrange adjacent GA-sequences side-by-side (‘GA-ribbon’), while folding the intervening DNA sequences between them into loops (‘associated DNA-loops’). (2) Genome navigation uses the GA-ribbon as a search path for specific target genes that is up to 730-fold shorter than the full-length chromosome. (3) As to the specificity of the search, each molecule of a target protein is assumed to catalyze the formation of specific oligomers from a set of transcription factors that recognize tetra-GA-motifs. Their specific combinations of tetra-GA motifs are assumed to be present in the particular GA-sequence whose associated loop contains the gene for the target protein. As long as the target protein is abundant in the cell it produces sufficient numbers of such oligomers which bind to their specific GA-sequences and, thereby, inhibit locally the transcription of the target protein in the associated loop. However, if the amount of target protein drops below a certain threshold, the resultant reduction of specific oligomers leaves the corresponding GA-sequence ‘denuded’. In response, the associated DNA-loop releases its nucleosomes and allows transcription of the target protein to proceed. (4) The Alu-transcripts may help control the general background of protein synthesis proportional to the number of transcriptionally active associated loops, especially in stressed cells. (5) The model offers a new mechanism of co-regulation of protein synthesis based on the shared segments of different GA-sequences. Public Library of Science 2009-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2651618/ /pubmed/19270754 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004701 Text en Albrecht-Buehler. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Albrecht-Buehler, Guenter
Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title_full Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title_fullStr Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title_full_unstemmed Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title_short Outline of a Genome Navigation System Based on the Properties of GA-Sequences and Their Flanks
title_sort outline of a genome navigation system based on the properties of ga-sequences and their flanks
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2651618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19270754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004701
work_keys_str_mv AT albrechtbuehlerguenter outlineofagenomenavigationsystembasedonthepropertiesofgasequencesandtheirflanks