Title: The sequence structure of human nucleosome DNA
1The sequence structure of human nucleosome DNA
2The team
- Simon B. Kogan and Edward N. Trifonov University
of Haifa (Israel) - Megumi Kato, Yoshiaki Onishi and Ryoiti Kiyama
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science
and Technology (Japan) - Yuko Wada-Kiyama Nippon Medical School (Japan)
- Takashi Abe, Toshimichi Ikemura National
Institute of Genetics (Japan)
3High-order chromatin
- Chromatin is protein-DNA complex from which
eukaryotic chromosomes are comprised (Euchromatin
and heterochromatin). - Levels of chromatin organization 300-nm loops
100-nm fiber ? 30-nm fiber nucleosomes. - Models of 30-nm fiber solenoid zigzag sallow
thorn.
4Electron Micrographs of Chromatin
Isolated metaphase chromosome
From the web site of Dr. Carol Heckman (Bowling
Green State University).
Modified from Bloom and Fawcett, A Textbook of
Histology, Chapman and Hall, 12th edition, Figure
1-14 (BioMEDIA web site)
510-30 nm fibers and fibrils
Modified from Bloom and Fawcett, A Textbook of
Histology, Chapman and Hall, 12th edition, Figure
1-12 (BioMEDIA web site)
6Levels of chromatin structure
From The University of Edinburgh Faculty of
Medicine web site
7Nucleosome
- Nucleosome is the basic block (lowest level) of
chromatin organization. - Most of genomic DNA is confined in nucleosomes
(one nucleosome per 200 base pairs on average). - Nucleosome core particle consist of histone
octamer (two molecules each of H2A, H2B, H3 and
H4 histone proteins) and stretch of super-coiled
double-stranded DNA 125-166 base pairs long.
8Nucleosome core particle
- Ribbon traces for the 146-bp DNA phosphodiester
backbones (brown and turquoise) and eight histone
protein main chains (blue H3 green H4 yellow
H2A red H2B (Luger et al., 1997).
9Chromatin function
- Package of DNA into chromosomes and nucleus.
- Condense chromatin (heterochromatin) silences
large chromosome DNA parts. - Epigenetic regulation of gene expression.
- Low and high order chromatin structures are
flexible and dynamic (i.e. chromatin remodeling).
They regulate biological activity by hiding or
exposure of DNA sites for protein binding.
10Nucleosome function
- Local higher-order chromatin structure depends on
positions of individual nucleosomes. - The level of DNA sequence exposure to variety of
binding factors depends on whether the sequence
is constrained in nucleosome core or belongs to
linker DNA. - Nucleosomes are positioned specifically in gene
promoters and splice junctions. Thus, influence
gene expression.
11Nucleosome positioning
- Nucleosome histones bind to DNA by means of
electrostatic forces. However, the binding
strength depends on specific DNA sequence. Thus,
sequence can modulate nucleosome positioning
preferences. - The important positioning factors are thought to
be sequences anisotropic flexibility and
curvature. Both of them depend mostly on base
pairs interactions in dinucleotides. - The anisotropy can be achieved by periodical
positioning of specific dinucleotides on the
distance equal to DNA helix period in
nucleosomes 10.4 bases.
12Positioning pattern
- Experimental identification of nucleosome
positions is a cumbersome task and results are
often imprecise and unreliable. Thus, the need
for computational biology methods. - Because of nucleosome abundance, the positioning
signal is necessary weak or very diverse to allow
overlapping of other DNA codes (i.e. amino-acid
triplet code). - However, several studies, observed weak AA(TT)
dinucleotide periodicity (Trifonov and Sussman,
1980). Consequently, AA(TT) positioning pattern
was built (Ioshikhes et al., 1996). More general
RR(YY) pattern was built even earlier
(Mengeritsky and Trifonov, 1983).
13RR(YY) pattern in humans
- Nobody (to the best of our knowledge) found the
10.4 periodicity in human genome. The presumed
reason is the exceptional weakness of nucleosome
preferential positioning in higher eukaryotes. - Utilizing large database of human dinucleosome
DNA obtained from laboratory of Prof. Kiyama, we
manage to obtain RR(YY) nucleosome positional
periodical pattern (Kato et al., 2003) and get
additional confirmation of nucleosome steric
exclusion rules described earlier (Ulanovsky and
Trifonov, 1986).
14RR(YY) pattern
- A symmetrized sum of RR and YY distributions.
The extrema corresponding to the 10.4n ladder
are indicated by arrows. Nucleosome sequences
were smoothed by running the average of three
positions (Kato et al., 2003).
15GG(CC) pattern in humans
- Detailed investigation of database sequences
revealed predominant usage of GG(CC)
dinucleotides in humans. - GG(CC) predominance is in contradiction with the
current opinion that only AA(TT) and TA are
important for nucleosome positioning. - This finding points to possible species
specificity of nucleosome positioning signal. - The result was confirmed in independent study
concerning the connection between nucleosome and
splicing junction positions (Kogan and Trifonov,
2005).
16GG(CC) pattern
17Weights of eight topmost periodical components of
splice junction dinucleotide profiles in four
species (Kogan and Trifonov, 2005)
Second line indicates amount of EI(IE) splice
junctions of the respective species in the data
set. For the purpose of comparison, the weights
are calculated as fitting sine amplitudes divided
by the sum of all 32 amplitudes, for each species
separately.
18Selected references
- Bolshoy, A. CC dinucleotides contribute to the
bending of DNA in chromatin. Nat Struct Biol 2
(1995) 446-8. - Herzel, H., Weiss, O. and Trifonov, E.N. 10-11
bp periodicities in complete genomes reflect
protein structure and DNA folding. Bioinformatics
15 (1999) 187-93. - Ioshikhes, I., Bolshoy, A., Derenshteyn, K.,
Borodovsky, M. and Trifonov, E.N. Nucleosome DNA
sequence pattern revealed by multiple alignment
of experimentally mapped sequences. J Mol Biol
262 (1996) 129-39. - Kato, M., Onishi, Y., Wada-Kiyama, Y., Abe, T.,
Ikemura, T., Kogan, S., Bolshoy, A., Trifonov,
E.N. and Kiyama, R. Dinucleosome DNA of human
K562 cells experimental and computational
characterizations. J Mol Biol 332 (2003) 111-25. - Kogan, S. and Trifonov, E.N. Gene splice sites
correlate with nucleosome positions. GENE, in
press (2005). - Mengeritsky, G. and Trifonov, E.N. Nucleotide
sequence-directed mapping of the nucleosomes.
Nucleic Acids Res 11 (1983) 3833-51. - Thastrom, A., Lowary, P.T., Widlund, H.R., Cao,
H., Kubista, M. and Widom, J. Sequence motifs
and free energies of selected natural and
non-natural nucleosome positioning DNA sequences.
J Mol Biol 288 (1999) 213-29. - Trifonov, E.N. and Sussman, J.L. The pitch of
chromatin DNA is reflected in its nucleotide
sequence. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 77 (1980)
3816-20.