Amborella trichopoda is strongly supported as the single living species of the sister lineage to all other extant flowering plants, providing a unique reference for inferring the genome content and structure of the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of living angiosperms. Sequencing the Amborella genome, we identified an ancient genome duplication predating angiosperm diversification, without evidence of subsequent, lineage-specific genome duplications. Comparisons between Amborella and other angiosperms facilitated reconstruction of the ancestral angiosperm gene content and gene order in the MRCA of core eudicots. We identify new gene families, gene duplications, and floral protein-protein interactions that first appeared in the ancestral angiosperm. Transposable elements in Amborella are ancient and highly divergent, with no recent transposon radiations. Population genomic analysis across Amborella's native range in New Caledonia reveals a recent genetic bottleneck and geographic structure with conservation implications.
SummaryATP-dependent chromatin remodellers allow access to DNA for transcription factors and the general transcription machinery, but whether mammalian chromatin remodellers1–3 target specific nucleosomes to regulate transcription is unclear. Here, we present genome-wide remodeller-nucleosome interaction profiles for Chd1, Chd2, Chd4, Chd6, Chd8, Chd9, Brg1 and Ep400 in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. These remodellers bind one or both full nucleosomes that flank MNase-defined nucleosome-free promoter regions (NFRs), where they separate divergent transcription. Surprisingly, large CpG-rich NFRs that extend downstream of annotated transcriptional start sites (TSSs) are nevertheless chromatinized with non-nucleosomal or subnucleosomal histone variants (H3.3 and H2A.Z) and modifications (H3K4me3 and H3K27ac). RNA polymerase (pol) II therefore navigates hundreds of bp of altered chromatin in the sense direction before encountering an MNase-resistant nucleosome at the 3′ end of the NFR. Transcriptome analysis upon remodeller depletion reveals reciprocal mechanisms of transcriptional regulation by remodellers. Whereas at active genes individual remodellers play either positive or negative roles via altering nucleosome stability, at polycomb-enriched bivalent genes the same remodellers act in an opposite manner. These findings indicate that remodellers target specific nucleosomes at the edge of NFRs, where they regulate ES cell transcriptional programs.
The genome-wide protein architecture of chromatin that maintains chromosome integrity and gene regulation is ill-defined. Here we use ChIP-exo/seq 1 , 2 to define this structure in Saccharomyces . We identified 21 ensembles consisting of ~400 different proteins related to DNA replication, centromeres, subtelomeres, transposons, and RNA polymerase (Pol) I, II, and III transcription. Replication proteins engulfed a nucleosome, centromeres lacked a nucleosome, and repressive proteins encompassed three nucleosomes at subtelomeric X-elements. We find that most Pol II promoters evolved to lack a regulatory region, having only a core promoter. These constitutive promoters comprised a short nucleosome-free region (NFR) adjacent to a +1 nucleosome, which together bound TFIID to form a preinitiation complex (PIC). Positioned insulators protected core promoters from upstream events. A small fraction of promoters were architected for inducibility, wherein sequence-specific transcription factors (TFs) create a nucleosome-depleted region (NDR) that is distinct from NFRs. We describe TF structural interactions with the genome and cognate cofactors, including nucleosomal and transcriptional regulators RPD3-L, SAGA, NuA4, Tup1, Mediator, and SWI-SNF. Surprisingly, we do not detect TF-TFIID interactions, suggesting that they do not stably occur. Our model for gene induction involves TFs, cofactors, and general factors like TBP and TFIIB, but not TFIID. However, constitutive transcription involves TFIID but not TFs and cofactors. From this we define a highly integrated network of TF-regulated transcription.
ENCODE 3 (2012-2017) expanded production and added new types of assays 8 (Fig. 1, Extended Data Fig. 1), which revealed landscapes of RNA binding and the 3D organization of chromatin via methods such as chromatin interaction analysis by paired-end tagging (ChIA-PET) and Hi-C chromosome conformation capture. Phases 2 and 3 delivered 9,239 experiments (7,495 in human and 1,744 in mouse) in more than 500 cell types and tissues, including mapping of transcribed regions and transcript isoforms, regions of transcripts recognized by RNA-binding proteins, transcription factor binding regions, and regions that harbour specific histone modifications, open chromatin, and 3D chromatin interactions. The results of all of these experiments are available at the ENCODE portal (http://www.encodeproject.org). These efforts, combined with those of related projects and many other laboratories, have produced a greatly enhanced view of the human genome (Fig. 2), identifying 20,225 protein-coding and 37,595 noncoding genes
Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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