4 research outputs found

    Relative contribution of MAR AT-rich cores and flanking sequences to the anti-silencing and transcriptional effects.

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    <p>The contribution of the AT rich DNA sequences of MAR 1–68 and X-29 alone (A), or combinations of the MAR 1–68 core with portions of its flanking sequences (B), were assessed for their anti-silencing and transcriptional augmentation activities as described in the legend to Fig. 2. An oligomeric form of the X-29 AT-rich region, consisting of three tandem repeats, was also analyzed. Results represent the mean±SD of 3 independent experiments and the statistical analysis are as for Fig. 2.</p

    Identification of the portions of MAR 1–68 that contribute to the anti-silencing and transcriptional effects.

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    <p>The AT core extended region of the MAR 1–68, as well as a series of sub-fragments of the 5′ and 3′ flanking regions, were cloned upstream of the EGFP reporter gene in both orientation and analyzed for their effects on GFP expression levels. Constructs containing the full-length MAR 1–68 or a control spacer DNA cloned upstream of the EGFP reporter gene were also transfected as controls. GFP fluorescence was measured by flow-cytometry on polyclonal cell pools obtained after 2 weeks of antibiotic selection following transfection, and the proportion of silent and of high expressor cells were scored as illustrated in Fig. 1B. Results illustrate the mean and standard deviation of 3 independent experiments. Significant differences relative to the corresponding control construct containing spacer DNA of the same size, as illustrated in Suppl. <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0079262#pone.0079262.s003" target="_blank">Fig. S3</a>, are indicated by stars above each bar, whereas line-associated stars indicate significant differences with constructs containing the full length MAR 1–68 or its extended core (Student test, P<0.05).</p

    Association of human MARs with a specific chromatin pattern.

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    <p>A) 1683 predicted human MAR genomic locations were aligned using the central positions of their AT rich cores. ChiP-Seq profiles were calculated over the MAR collection for the histone modifications H3K4me3, H3K27me3, H3K36me3 and for RNA Polymerase II. (B) 25000 RefSeq promoters were aligned at their respective TSS positions and oriented according to the direction of transcription. ChiP-Seq profiles were calculated over the promoter collection for indicated histone modification, and for the RNA Pol II. Tag counts were normalized globally and they are expressed as a fold change over the non-precipitated input DNA profile.</p

    Schematic representation of MAR 1–68 subdomains and illustration of its anti-silencing and transcriptional effects.

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    <p>(A) Schematic diagram representing the full-length human MAR 1–68 and its series of sub-fragments, cloned upstream of a minimal SV40 promoter and EGFP reporter gene. The 3.6 kb MAR 1–68 was subdivided into three regions: The MAR 1–68 “extended AT core” region encompassing the AT dinucleotide-rich sequence (yellow box, labelled A), its 5′ (blue, labelled B) and 3′ (green, labelled C) adjacent regions. Putative transcription factor binding sites for the SATB1, NMP4, CEBP, Fast and Hox transcription factors are illustrated by ellipses. The 5′ and 3′ flanking regions were further divided in portions comprising nt 1–910 (labelled D), nt 864–1652 (E), nt 2444–3000 (F) and nt 3020–3628 (G). (B) A typical flow cytometry profile of CHO DG44 cells stably co-transfected with the GFP expression vector containing full-length human MAR 1–68 (black line) or control spacer DNA (no MAR, red line) and with a neomycin resistance plasmid. 10<sup>5</sup> cells were subjected to flow cytometry analysis for GFP expression after 2 weeks of nemomycin selection. Cells displaying background fluorescence (silent cells) or high GFP expression levels are as indicated.</p
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