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Unusual combinatorial involvement of poly-A/T tracts in organizing genes and chromatin in Dictyostelium

  • Gue Su Chang
  • , Angelika A. Noegel
  • , Travis N. Mavrich
  • , Rolf Müller
  • , Lynn Tomsho
  • , Elissa Ward
  • , Marius Felder
  • , Cizhong Jiang
  • , Ludwig Eichinger
  • , Gernot Glöckner
  • , Stephan C. Schuster
  • , B. Franklin Pugh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Dictyostelium discoideum is an amoebozoa that exists in both a free-living unicellular and a multicellular form. It is situated in a deep branch in the evolutionary tree and is particularly noteworthy in having a very A/T-rich genome. Dictyostelium provides an ideal system to examine the extreme to which nucleotide bias may be employed in organizing promoters, genes, and nucleosomes across a genome. We find that Dictyostelium genes are demarcated precisely at their 5′ ends by poly-T tracts and precisely at their 3′ ends by poly-A tracts. These tracts are also associated with nucleosome-free regions and are embedded with precisely positioned TATA boxes. Homo- and heteropolymeric tracts of A and T demarcate nucleosome border regions. Together, these findings reveal the presence of a variety of functionally distinct polymeric A/T elements. Strikingly, Dictyostelium chromatin may be organized in di-nucleosome units but is otherwise organized as in animals. This includes a +1 nucleosome in a position that predicts the presence of a paused RNA polymerase II. Indeed, we find a strong phylogenetic relationship between the presence of the NELF pausing factor and positioning of the +1 nucleosome. Pausing and +1 nucleosome positioning may have coevolved in animals.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1098-1106
Number of pages9
JournalGenome Research
Volume22
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2012

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)

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