INVESTIGADORES
OCAMPO Josefina
artículos
Título:
Heavy transcription of yeast genes correlates with differential loss of histone H2B relative to H4 and queued RNA polymerases
Autor/es:
HOPE A COLE; JOSEFINA OCAMPO; JAMES R IBEN; RAZVAN V CHEREJI; DAVID J CLARK
Revista:
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Editorial:
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Referencias:
Lugar: Oxford; Año: 2014 vol. 42 p. 12512 - 12522
ISSN:
0305-1048
Resumen:
Eukaryotic chromatin is composed of nucleosomes, which contain nearly two coils of DNA wrapped around a central histone octamer. The octamer contains an H3-H4 tetramer and two H2A-H2B dimers. Gene activation is associated with chromatin disruption: a wider nucleosome-depleted region (NDR) at the promoter and reduced nucleosome occupancy over the coding region. Here, we examine the nature of disrupted chromatin after induction, using MNase-seq to map nucleosomes and subnucleosomes, and a refined high resolution ChIP-seq method to map H4, H2B and RNA polymerase II (Pol II) genome-wide. Over coding regions, induced genes show a differential loss of H2B relative to H4, which correlates with Pol II density and the appearance of sub- nucleosomes. After induction, Pol II is surprisingly low at the promoter, but accumulates on the gene and downstream of the termination site, implying that dissociation is very slow. Thus, induction-dependent chromatin disruption reflects both eviction of H2A- H2B dimers and the presence of queued Pol II elongation complexes. We propose that slow Pol II dissociation after transcription is a major factor in chromatin disruption and that it may be of critical importance in gene regulation.