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Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection

HSV is a large double stranded DNA virus, capable of causing a variety of diseases from the common cold sore to devastating encephalitis. Although DNA within the HSV virion does not contain any histone protein, within 1 h of infecting a cell and entering its nucleus the viral genome acquires some hi...

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Autores principales: Oh, Jaewook, Sanders, Iryna F., Chen, Eric Z., Li, Hongzhe, Tobias, John W., Isett, R. Benjamin, Penubarthi, Sindura, Sun, Hao, Baldwin, Don A., Fraser, Nigel W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4339549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25710170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117471
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author Oh, Jaewook
Sanders, Iryna F.
Chen, Eric Z.
Li, Hongzhe
Tobias, John W.
Isett, R. Benjamin
Penubarthi, Sindura
Sun, Hao
Baldwin, Don A.
Fraser, Nigel W.
author_facet Oh, Jaewook
Sanders, Iryna F.
Chen, Eric Z.
Li, Hongzhe
Tobias, John W.
Isett, R. Benjamin
Penubarthi, Sindura
Sun, Hao
Baldwin, Don A.
Fraser, Nigel W.
author_sort Oh, Jaewook
collection PubMed
description HSV is a large double stranded DNA virus, capable of causing a variety of diseases from the common cold sore to devastating encephalitis. Although DNA within the HSV virion does not contain any histone protein, within 1 h of infecting a cell and entering its nucleus the viral genome acquires some histone protein (nucleosomes). During lytic infection, partial micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion does not give the classic ladder band pattern, seen on digestion of cell DNA or latent viral DNA. However, complete digestion does give a mono-nucleosome band, strongly suggesting that there are some nucleosomes present on the viral genome during the lytic infection, but that they are not evenly positioned, with a 200bp repeat pattern, like cell DNA. Where then are the nucleosomes positioned? Here we perform HSV-1 genome wide nucleosome mapping, at a time when viral replication is in full swing (6hr PI), using a microarray consisting of 50mer oligonucleotides, covering the whole viral genome (152kb). Arrays were probed with MNase-protected fragments of DNA from infected cells. Cells were not treated with crosslinking agents, thus we are only mapping tightly bound nucleosomes. The data show that nucleosome deposition is not random. The distribution of signal on the arrays suggest that nucleosomes are located at preferred positions on the genome, and that there are some positions that are not occupied (nucleosome free regions -NFR or Nucleosome depleted regions -NDR), or occupied at frequency below our limit of detection in the population of genomes. Occupancy of only a fraction of the possible sites may explain the lack of a typical MNase partial digestion band ladder pattern for HSV DNA during lytic infection. On average, DNA encoding Immediate Early (IE), Early (E) and Late (L) genes appear to have a similar density of nucleosomes.
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spelling pubmed-43395492015-03-04 Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection Oh, Jaewook Sanders, Iryna F. Chen, Eric Z. Li, Hongzhe Tobias, John W. Isett, R. Benjamin Penubarthi, Sindura Sun, Hao Baldwin, Don A. Fraser, Nigel W. PLoS One Research Article HSV is a large double stranded DNA virus, capable of causing a variety of diseases from the common cold sore to devastating encephalitis. Although DNA within the HSV virion does not contain any histone protein, within 1 h of infecting a cell and entering its nucleus the viral genome acquires some histone protein (nucleosomes). During lytic infection, partial micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion does not give the classic ladder band pattern, seen on digestion of cell DNA or latent viral DNA. However, complete digestion does give a mono-nucleosome band, strongly suggesting that there are some nucleosomes present on the viral genome during the lytic infection, but that they are not evenly positioned, with a 200bp repeat pattern, like cell DNA. Where then are the nucleosomes positioned? Here we perform HSV-1 genome wide nucleosome mapping, at a time when viral replication is in full swing (6hr PI), using a microarray consisting of 50mer oligonucleotides, covering the whole viral genome (152kb). Arrays were probed with MNase-protected fragments of DNA from infected cells. Cells were not treated with crosslinking agents, thus we are only mapping tightly bound nucleosomes. The data show that nucleosome deposition is not random. The distribution of signal on the arrays suggest that nucleosomes are located at preferred positions on the genome, and that there are some positions that are not occupied (nucleosome free regions -NFR or Nucleosome depleted regions -NDR), or occupied at frequency below our limit of detection in the population of genomes. Occupancy of only a fraction of the possible sites may explain the lack of a typical MNase partial digestion band ladder pattern for HSV DNA during lytic infection. On average, DNA encoding Immediate Early (IE), Early (E) and Late (L) genes appear to have a similar density of nucleosomes. Public Library of Science 2015-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4339549/ /pubmed/25710170 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117471 Text en © 2015 Oh et al 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
Oh, Jaewook
Sanders, Iryna F.
Chen, Eric Z.
Li, Hongzhe
Tobias, John W.
Isett, R. Benjamin
Penubarthi, Sindura
Sun, Hao
Baldwin, Don A.
Fraser, Nigel W.
Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title_full Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title_fullStr Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title_full_unstemmed Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title_short Genome Wide Nucleosome Mapping for HSV-1 Shows Nucleosomes Are Deposited at Preferred Positions during Lytic Infection
title_sort genome wide nucleosome mapping for hsv-1 shows nucleosomes are deposited at preferred positions during lytic infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4339549/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25710170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117471
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