4.7 Article

The Active Mechanism of Nucleosome Depletion by Poly(dA:dT) Tracts In Vivo

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22158233

Keywords

nucleosome; chromatin; poly(dA; dT); remodeling; RSC; yeast; S; cerevisiae

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) [SFB1064]

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In vivo nucleosome depletion over poly(dA:dT) tracts is not universal, with weak depletion observed in S. pombe. The energy penalty for incorporating these tracts into nucleosomes is modest compared to the ATP hydrolysis energy expended by chromatin remodelers. Nucleosome depletion over poly(dA:dT) tracts is stronger in vivo compared to in vitro, and it is actively maintained in vivo.
Poly(dA:dT) tracts cause nucleosome depletion in many species, e.g., at promoters and replication origins. Their intrinsic biophysical sequence properties make them stiff and unfavorable for nucleosome assembly, as probed by in vitro nucleosome reconstitution. The mere correlation between nucleosome depletion over poly(dA:dT) tracts in in vitro reconstituted and in in vivo chromatin inspired an intrinsic nucleosome exclusion mechanism in vivo that is based only on DNA and histone properties. However, we compile here published and new evidence that this correlation does not reflect mechanistic causation. (1) Nucleosome depletion over poly(dA:dT) in vivo is not universal, e.g., very weak in S. pombe. (2) The energy penalty for incorporating poly(dA:dT) tracts into nucleosomes is modest (<10%) relative to ATP hydrolysis energy abundantly invested by chromatin remodelers. (3) Nucleosome depletion over poly(dA:dT) is much stronger in vivo than in vitro if monitored without MNase and (4) actively maintained in vivo. (5) S. cerevisiae promoters evolved a strand-biased poly(dA) versus poly(dT) distribution. (6) Nucleosome depletion over poly(dA) is directional in vivo. (7) The ATP dependent chromatin remodeler RSC preferentially and directionally displaces nucleosomes towards 5 ' of poly(dA). Especially distribution strand bias and displacement directionality would not be expected for an intrinsic mechanism. Together, this argues for an in vivo mechanism where active and species-specific read out of intrinsic sequence properties, e.g., by remodelers, shapes nucleosome organization.

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