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Phylogenomic analysis of the emergence of GC-rich transcription elements
Patricia Khuu et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 (42), 16528-33 (16 Oct 2007)
We have applied a comparative phylogenomic analysis to study the evolutionary relationships between GC content, CpG-dinucleotide content (CpGs), potential nuclear factor I (NFI) binding sites, and potential Z-DNA forming regions (ZDRs) as representative structural and functional GC-rich genomic elements. Our analysis indicates that CpG and NFI sites emerged with a general accretion of GC-rich sequences downstream of the eukaryotic transcription start site (TSS). Two distinct classes of ZDRs are observed at different locations proximal to the eukaryotic TSS. A robust CA/TG class of ZDRs was seen to emerge upstream of the TSS and independently of GC content, CpGs, and NFIs, whereas a second, weaker CG type appears to have evolved along with these downstream GC-rich elements. Taken together, the results provide a model for how GC-rich structural and functional eukaryotic markers emerge relative to each other, and indicate two distinct transition points for their occurrence: the first at the pro/eukaryotic boundary, and the second at or near the amniotic boundary.
 
Nucleosome positions predicted through comparative genomics
Ilya Ioshikhes et al.
Nat Genet 38 (10), 1210-5 (Oct 2006)
DNA sequence has long been recognized as an important contributor to nucleosome positioning, which has the potential to regulate access to genes. The extent to which the nucleosomal architecture at promoters is delineated by the underlying sequence is now being worked out. Here we use comparative genomics to report a genome-wide map of nucleosome positioning sequences (NPSs) located in the vicinity of all Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes. We find that the underlying DNA sequence provides a very good predictor of nucleosome locations that have been experimentally mapped to a small fraction of the genome. Notably, distinct classes of genes possess characteristic arrangements of NPSs that may be important for their regulation. In particular, genes that have a relatively compact NPS arrangement over the promoter region tend to have a TATA box buried in an NPS and tend to be highly regulated by chromatin modifying and remodeling factors.
 
Distribution, silencing potential and evolutionary impact of promoter DNA methylation in the human genome
Michael Weber et al.
Nature genetics, published online 04 Mar 2007
To gain insight into the function of DNA methylation at cis-regulatory regions and its impact on gene expression, we measured methylation, RNA polymerase occupancy and histone modifications at 16,000 promoters in primary human somatic and germline cells. We find CpG-poor promoters hypermethylated in somatic cells, which does not preclude their activity. This methylation is present in male gametes and results in evolutionary loss of CpG dinucleotides, as measured by divergence between humans and primates. In contrast, strong CpG island promoters are mostly unmethylated, even when inactive. Weak CpG island promoters are distinct, as they are preferential targets for de novo methylation in somatic cells. Notably, most germline-specific genes are methylated in somatic cells, suggesting additional functional selection. These results show that promoter sequence and gene function are major predictors of promoter methylation states. Moreover, we observe that inactive unmethylated CpG island promoters show elevated levels of dimethylation of Lys4 of histone H3, suggesting that this chromatin mark may protect DNA from methylation.
 
A Chromatin Landmark and Transcription Initiation at Most Promoters in Human Cells
A chromatin landmark and transcription initiation at most promoters in human cells
Matthew Guenther et al.
Cell 130, 77-88 (13 Jul 2007)
We describe the results of a genome-wide analysis of human cells that suggests that most protein-coding genes, including most genes thought to be transcriptionally inactive, experience transcription initiation. We found that nucleosomes with H3K4me3 and H3K9,14Ac modifications, together with RNA polymerase II, occupy the promoters of most protein-coding genes in human embryonic stem cells. Only a subset of these genes produce detectable full-length transcripts and are occupied by nucleosomes with H3K36me3 modifications, a hallmark of elongation. The other genes experience transcription initiation but show no evidence of elongation, suggesting that they are predominantly regulated at postinitiation steps. Genes encoding most developmental regulators fall into this group. Our results also identify a class of genes that are excluded from experiencing transcription initiation, at which mechanisms that prevent initiation must predominate. These observations extend to differentiated cells, suggesting that transcription initiation at most genes is a general phenomenon in human cells.
 
Systematic functional characterization of cis-regulatory motifs in human core promoters
Saurabh Sinha et al.
Genome Research, gr-6828808 (06 Feb 2008)
 
Transcription Regulation Through Promoter-Proximal Pausing of RNA Polymerase II
Science 319 (5871), 1791 (2008)

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