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Nucleosomes influence multiple steps during replication initiation

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Azmi, Ishara F
Maloney, Michael Finnan
Bell, Stephen P
Watanabe, Shinya
Kang, Sukhyun
Belsky, Jason A
MacAlpine, David M.
Peterson, Craig L
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Azmi, Ishara F
Maloney, Michael Finnan
Bell, Stephen P
Watanabe, Shinya
Kang, Sukhyun
Belsky, Jason A
MacAlpine, David M.
Peterson, Craig L
Source :
eLife
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Eukaryotic replication origin licensing, activation and timing are influenced by chromatin but a mechanistic understanding is lacking. Using reconstituted nucleosomal DNA replication assays, we assessed the impact of nucleosomes on replication initiation. To generate distinct nucleosomal landscapes, different chromatin-remodeling enzymes (CREs) were used to remodel nucleosomes on origin-DNA templates. Nucleosomal organization influenced two steps of replication initiation: origin licensing and helicase activation. Origin licensing assays showed that local nucleosome positioning enhanced origin specificity and modulated helicase loading by influencing ORC DNA binding. Interestingly, SWI/SNF- and RSC-remodeled nucleosomes were permissive for origin licensing but showed reduced helicase activation. Specific CREs rescued replication of these templates if added prior to helicase activation, indicating a permissive chromatin state must be established during origin licensing to allow efficient origin activation. Our studies show nucleosomes directly modulate origin licensing and activation through distinct mechanisms and provide insights into the regulation of replication initiation by chromatin.<br />American Cancer Society (Postdoctoral Fellowship 123700-PF-13-071-01)<br />National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (Koch Institute Support Grant P30-CA14051)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
eLife
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1018418644
Document Type :
Electronic Resource