Broad chromosomal domains of histone modification patterns in <i>C. elegans</i>

Tao Liu(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Andreas Rechtsteiner(University of California, Santa Cruz), Thea A. Egelhofer(University of California, Santa Cruz), Anne Vielle(University of Cambridge), Isabel Latorre(University of Cambridge), Ming-Sin Cheung(University of Cambridge), Sevinç Ercan(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Kohta Ikegami(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Morten B. Jensen(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Paulina Kolasinska-Zwierz(University of Cambridge), Heidi Rosenbaum(Roche (Switzerland)), Hyunjin Shin(Harvard University Press), S. Taing(Harvard University Press), Teruaki Takasaki(University of California, Santa Cruz), A. Leonardo Iniguez(Roche (Switzerland)), Arshad Desai(Ludwig Cancer Research), Abby F. Dernburg(QB3), Hiroshi Kimura(The University of Osaka), Jason D. Lieb(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Julie Ahringer(University of Cambridge), Susan Strome(University of California, Santa Cruz), X. Shirley Liu(Harvard University Press)
Genome Research
December 22, 2010
Cited by 302Open Access
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Abstract

Chromatin immunoprecipitation identifies specific interactions between genomic DNA and proteins, advancing our understanding of gene-level and chromosome-level regulation. Based on chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments using validated antibodies, we define the genome-wide distributions of 19 histone modifications, one histone variant, and eight chromatin-associated proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos and L3 larvae. Cluster analysis identified five groups of chromatin marks with shared features: Two groups correlate with gene repression, two with gene activation, and one with the X chromosome. The X chromosome displays numerous unique properties, including enrichment of monomethylated H4K20 and H3K27, which correlate with the different repressive mechanisms that operate in somatic tissues and germ cells, respectively. The data also revealed striking differences in chromatin composition between the autosomes and between chromosome arms and centers. Chromosomes I and III are globally enriched for marks of active genes, consistent with containing more highly expressed genes, compared to chromosomes II, IV, and especially V. Consistent with the absence of cytological heterochromatin and the holocentric nature of C. elegans chromosomes, markers of heterochromatin such as H3K9 methylation are not concentrated at a single region on each chromosome. Instead, H3K9 methylation is enriched on chromosome arms, coincident with zones of elevated meiotic recombination. Active genes in chromosome arms and centers have very similar histone mark distributions, suggesting that active domains in the arms are interspersed with heterochromatin-like structure. These data, which confirm and extend previous studies, allow for in-depth analysis of the organization and deployment of the C. elegans genome during development.


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