Structured nucleosome fingerprints enable high-resolution mapping of chromatin architecture within regulatory regions

Alicia N. Schep(Stanford University), Jason D. Buenrostro(Stanford University), Sarah K. Denny(Stanford University), Katja Schwartz(Stanford University), Gavin Sherlock(Stanford University), William J. Greenleaf(Stanford University)
Genome Research
August 27, 2015
Cited by 429Open Access
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Abstract

Transcription factors canonically bind nucleosome-free DNA, making the positioning of nucleosomes within regulatory regions crucial to the regulation of gene expression. Using the assay of transposase accessible chromatin (ATAC-seq), we observe a highly structured pattern of DNA fragment lengths and positions around nucleosomes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and use this distinctive two-dimensional nucleosomal "fingerprint" as the basis for a new nucleosome-positioning algorithm called NucleoATAC. We show that NucleoATAC can identify the rotational and translational positions of nucleosomes with up to base-pair resolution and provide quantitative measures of nucleosome occupancy in S. cerevisiae, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and human cells. We demonstrate the application of NucleoATAC to a number of outstanding problems in chromatin biology, including analysis of sequence features underlying nucleosome positioning, promoter chromatin architecture across species, identification of transient changes in nucleosome occupancy and positioning during a dynamic cellular response, and integrated analysis of nucleosome occupancy and transcription factor binding.


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