全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
PLOS Genetics  2009 

Transcription Initiation Activity Sets Replication Origin Efficiency in Mammalian Cells

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000446

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Genomic mapping of DNA replication origins (ORIs) in mammals provides a powerful means for understanding the regulatory complexity of our genome. Here we combine a genome-wide approach to identify preferential sites of DNA replication initiation at 0.4% of the mouse genome with detailed molecular analysis at distinct classes of ORIs according to their location relative to the genes. Our study reveals that 85% of the replication initiation sites in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells are associated with transcriptional units. Nearly half of the identified ORIs map at promoter regions and, interestingly, ORI density strongly correlates with promoter density, reflecting the coordinated organisation of replication and transcription in the mouse genome. Detailed analysis of ORI activity showed that CpG island promoter-ORIs are the most efficient ORIs in ES cells and both ORI specification and firing efficiency are maintained across cell types. Remarkably, the distribution of replication initiation sites at promoter-ORIs exactly parallels that of transcription start sites (TSS), suggesting a co-evolution of the regulatory regions driving replication and transcription. Moreover, we found that promoter-ORIs are significantly enriched in CAGE tags derived from early embryos relative to all promoters. This association implies that transcription initiation early in development sets the probability of ORI activation, unveiling a new hallmark in ORI efficiency regulation in mammalian cells.

References

[1]  Arias EE, Walter JC (2007) Strength in numbers: preventing rereplication via multiple mechanisms in eukaryotic cells. Genes Dev 21: 497–518.
[2]  Diffley JF (2004) Regulation of early events in chromosome replication. Curr Biol 14: R778–786.
[3]  Tabancay AP Jr, Forsburg SL (2006) Eukaryotic DNA replication in a chromatin context. Curr Top Dev Biol 76: 129–184.
[4]  Remus D, Beall EL, Botchan MR (2004) DNA topology, not DNA sequence, is a critical determinant for Drosophila ORC-DNA binding. Embo J 23: 897–907.
[5]  Vashee S, Cvetic C, Lu W, Simancek P, Kelly TJ, et al. (2003) Sequence-independent DNA binding and replication initiation by the human origin recognition complex. Genes Dev 17: 1894–1908.
[6]  Lin HB, Dijkwel PA, Hamlin JL (2005) Promiscuous initiation on mammalian chromosomal DNA templates and its possible suppression by transcription. Exp Cell Res 308: 53–64.
[7]  Mesner LD, Hamlin JL (2005) Specific signals at the 3′ end of the DHFR gene define one boundary of the downstream origin of replication. Genes Dev 19: 1053–1066.
[8]  Saha S, Shan Y, Mesner LD, Hamlin JL (2004) The promoter of the Chinese hamster ovary dihydrofolate reductase gene regulates the activity of the local origin and helps define its boundaries. Genes Dev 18: 397–410.
[9]  Beall EL, Manak JR, Zhou S, Bell M, Lipsick JS, et al. (2002) Role for a Drosophila Myb-containing protein complex in site-specific DNA replication. Nature 420: 833–837.
[10]  Bosco G, Du W, Orr-Weaver TL (2001) DNA replication control through interaction of E2F-RB and the origin recognition complex. Nat Cell Biol 3: 289–295.
[11]  Minami H, Takahashi J, Suto A, Saitoh Y, Tsutsumi K (2006) Binding of AlF-C, an Orc1-binding transcriptional regulator, enhances replicator activity of the rat aldolase B origin. Mol Cell Biol 26: 8770–8780.
[12]  Saitoh Y, Miyagi S, Ariga H, Tsutsumi K (2002) Functional domains involved in the interaction between Orc1 and transcriptional repressor AlF-C that bind to an origin/promoter of the rat aldolase B gene. Nucleic Acids Res 30: 5205–5212.
[13]  Danis E, Brodolin K, Menut S, Maiorano D, Girard-Reydet C, et al. (2004) Specification of a DNA replication origin by a transcription complex. Nat Cell Biol 6: 721–730.
[14]  Farkash-Amar S, Lipson D, Polten A, Goren A, Helmstetter C, et al. (2008) Global organization of replication time zones of the mouse genome. Genome Res 18: 1562–1570.
[15]  Hiratani I, Ryba T, Itoh M, Yokochi T, Schwaiger M, et al. (2008) Global reorganization of replication domains during embryonic stem cell differentiation. PLoS Biol 6: e245. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0060245.
[16]  MacAlpine DM, Rodriguez HK, Bell SP (2004) Coordination of replication and transcription along a Drosophila chromosome. Genes Dev 18: 3094–3105.
[17]  White EJ, Emanuelsson O, Scalzo D, Royce T, Kosak S, et al. (2004) DNA replication-timing analysis of human chromosome 22 at high resolution and different developmental states. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101: 17771–17776.
[18]  Woodfine K, Fiegler H, Beare DM, Collins JE, McCann OT, et al. (2004) Replication timing of the human genome. Hum Mol Genet 13: 191–202.
[19]  Cadoret JC, Meisch F, Hassan-Zadeh V, Luyten I, Guillet C, et al. (2008) Genome-wide studies highlight indirect links between human replication origins and gene regulation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105: 15837–15842.
[20]  Efroni S, Duttagupta R, Cheng J, Dehghani H, Hoeppner DJ, et al. (2008) Global transcription in pluripotent embryonic stem cells. Cell Stem Cell 2: 437–447.
[21]  Meshorer E, Yellajoshula D, George E, Scambler PJ, Brown DT, et al. (2006) Hyperdynamic plasticity of chromatin proteins in pluripotent embryonic stem cells. Dev Cell 10: 105–116.
[22]  Bernstein BE, Mikkelsen TS, Xie X, Kamal M, Huebert DJ, et al. (2006) A bivalent chromatin structure marks key developmental genes in embryonic stem cells. Cell 125: 315–326.
[23]  Boyer LA, Plath K, Zeitlinger J, Brambrink T, Medeiros LA, et al. (2006) Polycomb complexes repress developmental regulators in murine embryonic stem cells. Nature 441: 349–353.
[24]  Lee TI, Jenner RG, Boyer LA, Guenther MG, Levine SS, et al. (2006) Control of developmental regulators by Polycomb in human embryonic stem cells. Cell 125: 301–313.
[25]  Scacheri PC, Crawford G, Davis S (2006) Statistics for ChIP-chip and DNase hypersensitivity experiments on NimbleGen arrays. Meth Enzymol 411: 270–282.
[26]  Giacca M, Zentilin L, Norio P, Diviacco S, Dimitrova D, et al. (1994) Fine mapping of a replication origin of human DNA. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 91: 7119–7123.
[27]  Keller C, Ladenburger EM, Kremer M, Knippers R (2002) The origin recognition complex marks a replication origin in the human TOP1 gene promoter. J Biol Chem 277: 31430–31440.
[28]  Prioleau M, Gendron MC, Hyrien O (2003) Replication of the chicken beta-globin locus: early-firing origins at the 5′ HS4 insulator and the rho- and betaA-globin genes show opposite epigenetic modifications. Mol Cell Biol 23: 3536–3549.
[29]  Delgado S, Gómez M, Bird A, Antequera F (1998) Initiation of DNA replication at CpG islands in mammalian chromosomes. EMBO J 17: 2426–2435.
[30]  Ladenburger EM, Keller C, Knippers R (2002) Identification of a binding region for human origin recognition complex proteins 1 and 2 that coincides with an origin of DNA replication. Mol Cell Biol 22: 1036–1048.
[31]  Cohen SM, Hatada S, Brylawski BP, Smithies O, Kaufman DG, et al. (2004) Complementation of replication origin function in mouse embryonic stem cells by human DNA sequences. Genomics 84: 475–484.
[32]  Gómez M, Brockdorff N (2004) Heterochromatin on the inactive X chromosome delays replication timing without affecting origin usage. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101: 6923–6928.
[33]  Gómez M, Antequera F (2008) Overreplication of short DNA regions during S phase in human cells. Genes Dev 22: 375–385.
[34]  Gray SJ, Gerhardt J, Doerfler W, Small LE, Fanning E (2007) An origin of DNA replication in the promoter region of the human fragile X mental retardation (FMR1) gene. Mol Cell Biol 27: 426–437.
[35]  Kitsberg D, Selig S, Keshet I, Cedar H (1993) Replication structure of the human beta-globin gene domain. Nature 366: 588–590.
[36]  Hamlin JL, Dijkwel PA (1995) On the nature of replication origins in higher eukaryotes. Curr Opin Genet Dev 5: 153–161.
[37]  Carninci P, Sandelin A, Lenhard B, Katayama S, Shimokawa K, et al. (2006) Genome-wide analysis of mammalian promoter architecture and evolution. Nat Genet 38: 626–635.
[38]  Guenther MG, Levine SS, Boyer LA, Jaenisch R, Young RA (2007) A chromatin landmark and transcription initiation at most promoters in human cells. Cell 130: 77–88.
[39]  Barski A, Cuddapah S, Cui K, Roh TY, Schones DE, et al. (2007) High-resolution profiling of histone methylations in the human genome. Cell 129: 823–837.
[40]  Waltz SE, Trivedi AA, Leffak M (1996) DNA replication initiates non-randomly at multiple sites near the c-myc gene in HeLa cells. Nucleic Acids Res 24: 1887–1894.
[41]  Bernstein BE, Kamal M, Lindblad-Toh K, Bekiranov S, Bailey DK, et al. (2005) Genomic maps and comparative analysis of histone modifications in human and mouse. Cell 120: 169–181.
[42]  Daniels R, Lowell S, Bolton V, Monk M (1997) Transcription of tissue-specific genes in human preimplantation embryos. Hum Reprod 12: 2251–2256.
[43]  Macleod D, Ali RR, Bird A (1998) An alternative promoter in the mouse major histocompatibility complex class II I-Abeta gene: implications for the origin of CpG islands. Mol Cell Biol 18: 4433–4443.
[44]  Ponger L, Duret L, Mouchiroud D (2001) Determinants of CpG islands: expression in early embryo and isochore structure. Genome Res 11: 1854–1860.
[45]  Wise TL, Pravtcheva DD (1999) The undermethylated state of a CpG island region in igf2 transgenes is dependent on the H19 enhancers. Genomics 60: 258–271.
[46]  Core LJ, Waterfall JJ, Lis JT (2008) Nascent RNA sequencing reveals widespread pausing and divergent initiation at human promoters. Science 322: 1845–1848.
[47]  Seila AC, Calabrese JM, Levine SS, Yeo GW, Rahl PB, et al. (2008) Divergent transcription from active promoters. Science 322: 1849–1851.
[48]  DePamphilis ML (1996) Origins of DNA replication. In: DePamphilis ML, editor. DNA replication in eukaryotic cells. CSHL Press. pp. 45–86.
[49]  DePamphilis ML (1999) Replication origins in metazoan chromosomes: fact or fiction? Bioessays 21: 5–16.
[50]  Norseen J, Thomae A, Sridharan V, Aiyar A, Schepers A, et al. (2008) RNA-dependent recruitment of the origin recognition complex. Embo J 27: 3024–3035.
[51]  Dazy S, Gandrillon O, Hyrien O, Prioleau M (2006) Broadening of DNA replication origin usage during metazoan cell differentiation. EMBO Rep 7: 806–811.
[52]  Norio P, Kosiyatrakul S, Yang Q, Guan Z, Brown NM, et al. (2005) Progressive activation of DNA replication initiation in large domains of the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus during B cell development. Molecular Cell 20: 575–587.
[53]  Antequera F, Bird A (1999) CpG islands as genomic footprints of promoters that are associated with replication origins. Curr Biol 9: R661–667.
[54]  Han L, Su B, Li WH, Zhao Z (2008) CpG island density and its correlations with genomic features in mammalian genomes. Genome Biol 9: R79.
[55]  Venter JC, Adams MD, Myers EW, Li PW, Mural RJ, et al. (2001) The sequence of the human genome. Science 291: 1304–1351.
[56]  Waterston RH, Lindblad-Toh K, Birney E, Rogers J, Abril JF, et al. (2002) Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genome. Nature 420: 520–562.
[57]  Antequera F, Bird A (1993) Number of CpG islands and genes in human and mouse. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 11995–11999.
[58]  Cross SH, Bird AP (1995) CpG islands and genes. Current Opinion in Gen Dev 5: 309–314.
[59]  Penny GD, Kay GF, Sheardown SA, Rastan S, Brockdorff N (1996) Requirement for Xist in X chromosome inactivation. Nature 379: 131–137.
[60]  Team RDC (2008) R: a languange and environment for statistical computing. Vienna, Austria.
[61]  Takai D, Jones PA (2002) Comprehensive analysis of CpG islands in human chromosomes 21 and 22. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 99: 3740–3745.
[62]  Morey L, Brenner C, Fazi F, Villa R, Gutierrez A, et al. (2008) MBD3, a component of the NuRD complex, facilitates chromatin alteration and deposition of epigenetic marks. Mol Cell Biol 28: 5912–5923.

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133