32 research outputs found
Evidence for Sequential and Increasing Activation of Replication Origins along Replication Timing Gradients in the Human Genome
Genome-wide replication timing studies have suggested that mammalian chromosomes consist of megabase-scale domains of coordinated origin firing separated by large originless transition regions. Here, we report a quantitative genome-wide analysis of DNA replication kinetics in several human cell types that contradicts this view. DNA combing in HeLa cells sorted into four temporal compartments of S phase shows that replication origins are spaced at 40 kb intervals and fire as small clusters whose synchrony increases during S phase and that replication fork velocity (mean 0.7 kb/min, maximum 2.0 kb/min) remains constant and narrowly distributed through S phase. However, multi-scale analysis of a genome-wide replication timing profile shows a broad distribution of replication timing gradients with practically no regions larger than 100 kb replicating at less than 2 kb/min. Therefore, HeLa cells lack large regions of unidirectional fork progression. Temporal transition regions are replicated by sequential activation of origins at a rate that increases during S phase and replication timing gradients are set by the delay and the spacing between successive origin firings rather than by the velocity of single forks. Activation of internal origins in a specific temporal transition region is directly demonstrated by DNA combing of the IGH locus in HeLa cells. Analysis of published origin maps in HeLa cells and published replication timing and DNA combing data in several other cell types corroborate these findings, with the interesting exception of embryonic stem cells where regions of unidirectional fork progression seem more abundant. These results can be explained if origins fire independently of each other but under the control of long-range chromatin structure, or if replication forks progressing from early origins stimulate initiation in nearby unreplicated DNA. These findings shed a new light on the replication timing program of mammalian genomes and provide a general model for their replication kinetics
Selfish drive can trump function when animal mitochondrial genomes compete.
Mitochondrial genomes compete for transmission from mother to progeny. We explored this competition by introducing a second genome into Drosophila melanogaster to follow transmission. Competitions between closely related genomes favored those functional in electron transport, resulting in a host-beneficial purifying selection. In contrast, matchups between distantly related genomes often favored those with negligible, negative or lethal consequences, indicating selfish selection. Exhibiting powerful selfish selection, a genome carrying a detrimental mutation displaced a complementing genome, leading to population death after several generations. In a different pairing, opposing selfish and purifying selection counterbalanced to give stable transmission of two genomes. Sequencing of recombinant mitochondrial genomes showed that the noncoding region, containing origins of replication, governs selfish transmission. Uniparental inheritance prevents encounters between distantly related genomes. Nonetheless, in each maternal lineage, constant competition among sibling genomes selects for super-replicators. We suggest that this relentless competition drives positive selection, promoting change in the sequences influencing transmission
Transcription initiation activity sets replication origin efficiency in mammalian cells
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 cellsWork in María Gómez’s laboratory is supported by grants from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science (BFU2007-66827) and the Consejería de
Sanidad of the Junta de Castilla y León (SAN196/SA12/07). JSM was supported by a grant from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (SFRH/BD/
11824/2003
Arabidopsis thaliana chromosome 4 replicates in two phases that correlate with chromatin state
DNA replication programs have been studied extensively in yeast and animal systems, where they have been shown to correlate with gene expression and certain epigenetic modifications. Despite the conservation of core DNA replication proteins, little is known about replication programs in plants. We used flow cytometry and tiling microarrays to profile DNA replication of Arabidopsis thaliana chromosome 4 (chr4) during early, mid, and late S phase. Replication profiles for early and mid S phase were similar and encompassed the majority of the euchromatin. Late S phase exhibited a distinctly different profile that includes the remaining euchromatin and essentially all of the heterochromatin. Termination zones were consistent between experiments, allowing us to define 163 putative replicons on chr4 that clustered into larger domains of predominately early or late replication. Early-replicating sequences, especially the initiation zones of early replicons, displayed a pattern of epigenetic modifications specifying an open chromatin conformation. Late replicons, and the termination zones of early replicons, showed an opposite pattern. Histone H3 acetylated on lysine 56 (H3K56ac) was enriched in early replicons, as well as the initiation zones of both early and late replicons. H3K56ac was also associated with expressed genes, but this effect was local whereas replication time correlated with H3K56ac over broad regions. The similarity of the replication profiles for early and mid S phase cells indicates that replication origin activation in euchromatin is stochastic. Replicon organization in Arabidopsis is strongly influenced by epigenetic modifications to histones and DNA. The domain organization of Arabidopsis is more similar to that in Drosophila than that in mammals, which may reflect genome size and complexity. The distinct patterns of association of H3K56ac with gene expression and early replication provide evidence that H3K56ac may be associated with initiation zones and replication origins
Unlocking the secrets of the genome
The primary objective of the Human Genome Project was to produce high-quality sequences not just for the human genome but also for those of the chief model organisms: Escherichia coli, yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), worm (Caenorhabditis elegans), fly (Drosophila melanogaster) and mouse (Mus musculus). Free access to the resultant data has prompted much biological research, including development of a map of common human genetic variants (the International HapMap Project)1, expression profiling of healthy and diseased cells2 and in-depth studies of many individual genes. These genome sequences have enabled researchers to carry out genetic and functional genomic studies not previously possible, revealing new biological insights with broad relevance across the animal kingdom 3, 4
