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Part 3 How Genomes Function

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Chromosome package status, the accessibility. 10.1 Inside the nucleus ... Facultative heterochromatin. Euchromatin: less compact, accessible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Part 3 How Genomes Function


1
Part 3How Genomes Function
  • Transcription, translation and their regulation

2
Chapter 10Accessing the Genome
  • Chromosome package status, the accessibility

3
10.1 Inside the nucleus
  • Not all parts of the genome are readily
    accessible to the DNA-binding proteins that are
    responsible for its expression.
  • Histones and other packaging proteins are not
    simply inert structures around which the DNA is
    wound

4
10.1.1 The internal architecture of the
eukaryotic nucleus
  • The inside of the nucleus is just as complex as
    the cytoplasm of the cell, the only difference
    being that, in contrast to the cytoplasm, the
    functional compartments within the nucleus are
    not individually enclosed by membranes, and so
    are not visible when the cell is observed using
    conventional light or electron microscopy
    techniques.
  • The nucleus has a highly ordered internal
    structure.

5
Each chromosome has its own territory within the
nucleus
  • Remain stationary throughout the cell cycle

6
Something New
  • We describe Hi-C, a method that probes the
    three-dimensional architecture of whole genomes
    by coupling proximity-based ligation with
    massively parallel sequencing. We constructed
    spatial proximity maps of the human genome with
    Hi-C at a resolution of 1 megabase. These maps
    confirm the presence of chromosome territories
    and the spatial proximity of small, gene-rich
    chromosomes. We identified an additional level of
    genome organization that is characterized by the
    spatial segregation of open and closed chromatin
    to form two genome-wide compartments. At the
    megabase scale, the chromatin conformation is
    consistent with a fractal globule, a knot-free,
    polymer conformation that enables maximally dense
    packing while preserving the ability to easily
    fold and unfold any genomic locus. The fractal
    globule is distinct from the more commonly used
    globular equilibrium model. Our results
    demonstrate the power of Hi-C to map the dynamic
    conformations of whole genomes.

7
Something New
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    ????????????????????????????????(??????),???-?????
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8
Something New
Lieberman-Aiden et al 2009. Comprehensive
mapping of long-range interactions reveals
folding principles of the human genome. Science
326289-293.
9
Something New
10
10.1.2 Chromatin domains
  • Chromatin structure is hierarchic, ranging from
    the two lowest levels of DNA packaging the
    nucleosome and the 30 nm chromatin fiber to the
    metaphase chromosomes.
  • Constitutive heterochromatin Centromeric and
    telomeric DNA as well as certain regions of some
    other chromosomes (human Y).
  • Facultative heterochromatin
  • Euchromatin less compact, accessible

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12
  • Structural domains and functional domains
  • Some structural domains contain genes that are
    not functionally related, and the boundaries of
    some structural domains lie within genes.

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14
Functional domains are defined by insulators
  • Insulator 1-2kb in length, first discovered in
    Drosophila and have now been identified in a
    range of eukaryotes.

15
Loop formation at insulator sites
  • Krivega M, Dean A Insulators Organize Chromatin
    Emerging Rules of the Game. Mol Cell 2011,
    441-2.
  • Wood Ashley M, Van Bortle K, Ramos E, Takenaka N,
    Rohrbaugh M, Jones Brian C, Jones Keith C, Corces
    Victor G Regulation of Chromatin Organization
    and Inducible Gene Expression by a Drosophila
    Insulator. Mol Cell 2011, 4429-38.

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19
Some functional domains contain locus control
regions
20
10.2 Chromatin modifications and genome expression
21
10.2.1 Chemical modification of histones
  • Acetylation (???) of histones, the most best
    studied type in various modifications, influences
    many nuclear activities including genome
    expression.

22
The histones in heterochromatin are generally
unacetylated whereas those in functional domains
are acetylated.
23
  • Histones deacetylation represses active regions
    of the genome
  • Other types of histone modifications methylation
    (repress or activate, depends on, irreversible?,
    so long term), phosphorylation, ubiquitination,
    etc.
  • Histone code
  • Cause and effect?

24
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25
10.2.2 The influence of nucleosome remodeling on
genome expression
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27
10.3 DNA modification and genome expression
  • Making chemical changes to the DNA, semipermanent
    silencing.
  • The modified state is inherited in cell division.

28
10.3.1 Genome silencing by DNA methylation
29
  • Cytosine methylation is relatively rare in lower
    eukaryotes, but in vertebrates up to 10 of the
    total cytosine bases in a genome are methylated,
    and in plants, the figure can be as high as 30.

30
Methyl-CpG-binding proteins are components of the
Sin3 and NuRD histone deacetylase complex.
31
Methylation is involved in genomic imprinting and
X activation
  • Imprinting genes tend to occur in clusters.
  • Igf2, a growth factor gene.
  • H19 gene
  • Evolutionary conflicts between the males and
    females.
  • David Haig, Professor of Biology in Harvard
    university

32
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33
X activation
  • Some 20 genes escape the process and remain
    functional.
  • X inactivation center (Xic),
  • Xist, transcribed into 25 kb noncoding RNA.
  • Replacement of histone H2A, one of the members of
    the core octamer of the nucleosome (Section
    2.2.1), with a special histone, macroH2A1
  • Deacetylation of histone H4, as usually occurs in
    heterochromatin
  • Hypermethylation of certain DNA sequences,
    although this appears to occur after the inactive
    state has been set up.

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36
Something Not New
  • DNA wrapped in nucleosomes is sterically
    occluded, creating obstacles for proteins that
    must bind it. How proteins gain access to DNA
    buried inside nucleosomes is not known.
  • Here we report measurements of the rates of
    spontaneous nucleosome conformational changes in
    which a stretch of DNA transiently unwraps off
    the histone surface, starting from one end of the
    nucleosome, and then rewraps. The rates are
    rapid. Nucleosomal DNA remains fully wrapped for
    only about 250 ms before spontaneously
    unwrapping unwrapped DNA rewraps within about
    1050 ms.

37
Something Not New
  • Spontaneous unwrapping of nucleosomal DNA allows
    any protein rapid access even to buried stretches
    of the DNA. Our results explain how remodeling
    factors can be recruited to particular
    nucleosomes on a biologically relevant timescale,
    and they imply that the major impediment to entry
    of RNA polymerase into a nucleosome is rewrapping
    of nucleosomal DNA, not unwrapping.
  • From Li G, et al. (2005) Rapid spontaneous
    accessibility of nucleosomal DNA. Nat Struct Mol
    Biol 1246-53

38
Something New
  • Then how to transcribe a gene?
  • The nucleosome behaves as a fluctuating barrier
    that locally increases pause density, slows pause
    recovery, and reduces the apparent pause-free
    velocity of Pol II. The polymerase, rather than
    actively separating DNA from histones, functions
    instead as a ratchet that rectifies nucleosomal
    fluctuations.
  • Hodges C, et al (2009) Nucleosomal Fluctuations
    Govern the Transcription Dynamics of RNA
    Polymerase II. Science 325626-628
  • Otterstrom JJ, M. van Oijen A (2009) Nudging
    Through a Nucleosome. Science 325547-548

39
Something New
  • Multiple transcribing Pol II complexes can
    efficiently overcome the high nucleosomal barrier
    and displace the entire histone octamer.
    DNA-bound histone hexamer left behind the first
    complex of transcribing enzyme is evicted by the
    next Pol II complex. Thus transcription by single
    Pol II complexes allows survival of the original
    H3/H4 histones, while multiple, closely spaced
    complexes of transcribing Pol II can induce
    displacement of all core histones along the gene.
  • Kulaeva OI, et al. (2010) RNA polymerase
    complexes cooperate to relieve the nucleosomal
    barrier and evict histones. PNAS 10711325-11330

40
Something New
  • At a low Pol II density transcription is
    accompanied by transient displacement/exchange of
    H2A/H2B dimer(s) the nucleosome structure is
    recovered before arrival of the next Pol II
    complex. At a higher density Pol II complexes
    encounter hexasomes that are missing H2A/H2B
    dimer(s) therefore, all core histones are
    evicted and exchanged.

41
Discussion and speculation
  • Niu DK and Wang YF (1995). Why animals have
    tumours. Acta Biotheoretica 43 279-280. ?????

42
Further Reading
  • Buratowski, S., and D. Moazed. 2005. Gene
    regulation Expression and silencing coupled.
    Nature 4351174-1175.
  • Haig, D. 2004 Genomic imprinting and kinship how
    good is the evidence? Annual Review of Genetics
    38 553-585.
  • Prendergast et al. 2007. Chromatin structure and
    evolution in the human genome. BMC Evol. Biol. 7
    72.
  • Lieberman-Aiden et al 2009. Comprehensive
    mapping of long-range interactions reveals
    folding principles of the human genome. Science
    326289-293.
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