Abstract

The nucleosome repeat length (NRL) is an integral chromatin property important for its biological functions. Recent experiments revealed several conflicting trends of the NRL dependence on the concentrations of histones and other architectural chromatin proteins, both in vitro and in vivo, but a systematic theoretical description of NRL as a function of DNA sequence and epigenetic determinants is currently lacking. To address this problem, we have performed an integrative biophysical and bioinformatics analysis in species ranging from yeast to frog to mouse where NRL was studied as a function of various parameters. We show that in simple eukaryotes such as yeast, a lower limit for the NRL value exists, determined by internucleosome interactions and remodeler action. For higher eukaryotes, also the upper limit exists since NRL is an increasing but saturating function of the linker histone concentration. Counterintuitively, smaller H1 variants or non-histone architectural proteins can initiate larger effects on the NRL due to entropic reasons. Furthermore, we demonstrate that different regimes of the NRL dependence on histone concentrations exist depending on whether DNA sequence-specific effects dominate over boundary effects or vice versa. We consider several classes of genomic regions with apparently different regimes of the NRL variation. As one extreme, our analysis reveals that the period of oscillations of the nucleosome density around bound RNA polymerase coincides with the period of oscillations of positioning sites of the corresponding DNA sequence. At another extreme, we show that although mouse major satellite repeats intrinsically encode well-defined nucleosome preferences, they have no unique nucleosome arrangement and can undergo a switch between two distinct types of nucleosome positioning.

Highlights

  • The elementary unit of DNA packaging in the eukaryotic cell is the nucleosome, which consists of,147 bp of DNA wrapped around the core histone octamer

  • DNA compaction is achieved at different hierarchical levels with the help of a number of architectural proteins

  • Each nucleosome contains about 147 DNA base pairs; the length of DNA between the neighboring nucleosomes varies from nearly zero to several hundred of base pairs

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Summary

Introduction

The elementary unit of DNA packaging in the eukaryotic cell is the nucleosome, which consists of ,147 bp of DNA wrapped around the core histone octamer. The knowledge of nucleosome positions is required to estimate the accessibility of transcription factors (TFs) to their DNA binding sites, quantify 3D chromatin structure, and understand the epigenetic regulation of gene expression. For this purpose, 1D lattice descriptions with nucleosome positions characterized by a single genomic coordinate became very popular [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]

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