Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.

To gain deeper insights into principles of cell biology, it is essential to understand how cells reorganize their genomes by chromatin remodeling. We analyzed chromatin remodeling on next generation sequencing data from resting and activated T cells to determine a whole-genome chromatin remodeling l...

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Main Authors: Karin Schwarzbauer, Ulrich Bodenhofer, Sepp Hochreiter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23144837/pdf/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-da26f7430e43405f8252ab39e4bb14ad2021-03-03T20:26:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01711e4792410.1371/journal.pone.0047924Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.Karin SchwarzbauerUlrich BodenhoferSepp HochreiterTo gain deeper insights into principles of cell biology, it is essential to understand how cells reorganize their genomes by chromatin remodeling. We analyzed chromatin remodeling on next generation sequencing data from resting and activated T cells to determine a whole-genome chromatin remodeling landscape. We consider chromatin remodeling in terms of nucleosome repositioning which can be observed most robustly in long nucleosome-free regions (LNFRs) that are occupied by nucleosomes in another cell state. We found that LNFR sequences are either AT-rich or GC-rich, where nucleosome repositioning was observed much more prominently in GC-rich LNFRs - a considerable proportion of them outside promoter regions. Using support vector machines with string kernels, we identified a GC-rich DNA sequence pattern indicating loci of nucleosome repositioning in resting T cells. This pattern appears to be also typical for CpG islands. We found out that nucleosome repositioning in GC-rich LNFRs is indeed associated with CpG islands and with binding sites of the CpG-island-binding ZF-CXXC proteins KDM2A and CFP1. That this association occurs prominently inside and also prominently outside of promoter regions hints at a mechanism governing nucleosome repositioning that acts on a whole-genome scale.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23144837/pdf/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Schwarzbauer
Ulrich Bodenhofer
Sepp Hochreiter
spellingShingle Karin Schwarzbauer
Ulrich Bodenhofer
Sepp Hochreiter
Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Karin Schwarzbauer
Ulrich Bodenhofer
Sepp Hochreiter
author_sort Karin Schwarzbauer
title Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
title_short Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
title_full Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
title_fullStr Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
title_full_unstemmed Genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at GC-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
title_sort genome-wide chromatin remodeling identified at gc-rich long nucleosome-free regions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description To gain deeper insights into principles of cell biology, it is essential to understand how cells reorganize their genomes by chromatin remodeling. We analyzed chromatin remodeling on next generation sequencing data from resting and activated T cells to determine a whole-genome chromatin remodeling landscape. We consider chromatin remodeling in terms of nucleosome repositioning which can be observed most robustly in long nucleosome-free regions (LNFRs) that are occupied by nucleosomes in another cell state. We found that LNFR sequences are either AT-rich or GC-rich, where nucleosome repositioning was observed much more prominently in GC-rich LNFRs - a considerable proportion of them outside promoter regions. Using support vector machines with string kernels, we identified a GC-rich DNA sequence pattern indicating loci of nucleosome repositioning in resting T cells. This pattern appears to be also typical for CpG islands. We found out that nucleosome repositioning in GC-rich LNFRs is indeed associated with CpG islands and with binding sites of the CpG-island-binding ZF-CXXC proteins KDM2A and CFP1. That this association occurs prominently inside and also prominently outside of promoter regions hints at a mechanism governing nucleosome repositioning that acts on a whole-genome scale.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23144837/pdf/?tool=EBI
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AT ulrichbodenhofer genomewidechromatinremodelingidentifiedatgcrichlongnucleosomefreeregions
AT sepphochreiter genomewidechromatinremodelingidentifiedatgcrichlongnucleosomefreeregions
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