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Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells

The fundamental repeating unit of eukaryotic chromatin is the nucleosome. Besides being involved in packaging DNA, nucleosome organization plays an important role in transcriptional regulation and cellular identity. Currently, there is much debate about the major determinants of the nucleosome archi...

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Autores principales: Yazdi, Puya G., Pedersen, Brian A., Taylor, Jared F., Khattab, Omar S., Chen, Yu-Han, Chen, Yumay, Jacobsen, Steven E., Wang, Ping H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4549264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26305225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136314
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author Yazdi, Puya G.
Pedersen, Brian A.
Taylor, Jared F.
Khattab, Omar S.
Chen, Yu-Han
Chen, Yumay
Jacobsen, Steven E.
Wang, Ping H.
author_facet Yazdi, Puya G.
Pedersen, Brian A.
Taylor, Jared F.
Khattab, Omar S.
Chen, Yu-Han
Chen, Yumay
Jacobsen, Steven E.
Wang, Ping H.
author_sort Yazdi, Puya G.
collection PubMed
description The fundamental repeating unit of eukaryotic chromatin is the nucleosome. Besides being involved in packaging DNA, nucleosome organization plays an important role in transcriptional regulation and cellular identity. Currently, there is much debate about the major determinants of the nucleosome architecture of a genome and its significance with little being known about its role in stem cells. To address these questions, we performed ultra-deep sequencing of nucleosomal DNA in two human embryonic stem cell lines and integrated our data with numerous epigenomic maps. Our analyses have revealed that the genome is a determinant of nucleosome organization with transcriptionally inactive regions characterized by a “ground state” of nucleosome profiles driven by underlying DNA sequences. DNA sequence preferences are associated with heterogeneous chromatin organization around transcription start sites. Transcription, histone modifications, and DNA methylation alter this “ground state” by having distinct effects on both nucleosome positioning and occupancy. As the transcriptional rate increases, nucleosomes become better positioned. Exons transcribed and included in the final spliced mRNA have distinct nucleosome profiles in comparison to exons not included at exon-exon junctions. Genes marked by the active modification H3K4m3 are characterized by lower nucleosome occupancy before the transcription start site compared to genes marked by the inactive modification H3K27m3, while bivalent domains, genes associated with both marks, lie exactly in the middle. Combinatorial patterns of epigenetic marks (chromatin states) are associated with unique nucleosome profiles. Nucleosome organization varies around transcription factor binding in enhancers versus promoters. DNA methylation is associated with increasing nucleosome occupancy and different types of methylations have distinct location preferences within the nucleosome core particle. Finally, computational analysis of nucleosome organization alone is sufficient to elucidate much of the circuitry of pluripotency. Our results, suggest that nucleosome organization is associated with numerous genomic and epigenomic processes and can be used to elucidate cellular identity.
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spelling pubmed-45492642015-09-01 Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells Yazdi, Puya G. Pedersen, Brian A. Taylor, Jared F. Khattab, Omar S. Chen, Yu-Han Chen, Yumay Jacobsen, Steven E. Wang, Ping H. PLoS One Research Article The fundamental repeating unit of eukaryotic chromatin is the nucleosome. Besides being involved in packaging DNA, nucleosome organization plays an important role in transcriptional regulation and cellular identity. Currently, there is much debate about the major determinants of the nucleosome architecture of a genome and its significance with little being known about its role in stem cells. To address these questions, we performed ultra-deep sequencing of nucleosomal DNA in two human embryonic stem cell lines and integrated our data with numerous epigenomic maps. Our analyses have revealed that the genome is a determinant of nucleosome organization with transcriptionally inactive regions characterized by a “ground state” of nucleosome profiles driven by underlying DNA sequences. DNA sequence preferences are associated with heterogeneous chromatin organization around transcription start sites. Transcription, histone modifications, and DNA methylation alter this “ground state” by having distinct effects on both nucleosome positioning and occupancy. As the transcriptional rate increases, nucleosomes become better positioned. Exons transcribed and included in the final spliced mRNA have distinct nucleosome profiles in comparison to exons not included at exon-exon junctions. Genes marked by the active modification H3K4m3 are characterized by lower nucleosome occupancy before the transcription start site compared to genes marked by the inactive modification H3K27m3, while bivalent domains, genes associated with both marks, lie exactly in the middle. Combinatorial patterns of epigenetic marks (chromatin states) are associated with unique nucleosome profiles. Nucleosome organization varies around transcription factor binding in enhancers versus promoters. DNA methylation is associated with increasing nucleosome occupancy and different types of methylations have distinct location preferences within the nucleosome core particle. Finally, computational analysis of nucleosome organization alone is sufficient to elucidate much of the circuitry of pluripotency. Our results, suggest that nucleosome organization is associated with numerous genomic and epigenomic processes and can be used to elucidate cellular identity. Public Library of Science 2015-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4549264/ /pubmed/26305225 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136314 Text en © 2015 Yazdi 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
Yazdi, Puya G.
Pedersen, Brian A.
Taylor, Jared F.
Khattab, Omar S.
Chen, Yu-Han
Chen, Yumay
Jacobsen, Steven E.
Wang, Ping H.
Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title_full Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title_fullStr Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title_full_unstemmed Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title_short Nucleosome Organization in Human Embryonic Stem Cells
title_sort nucleosome organization in human embryonic stem cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4549264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26305225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136314
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