Eukaryotic DNA is organized into chromatin domains that regulate gene expression and chromosome behavior. Insulators and/or scaffold-matrix attachment regions (S/MARs) mark the boundaries of these chromatin domains where they delimit enhancing and silencing effects from the outside. By recombinasemediated cassette exchange (RMCE), we were able to compare these two types of bordering elements at a number of predefined genomic loci. Flanking an expression vector with either S/MARs or two copies of the non-S/MAR chicken hypersensitive site 4 insulator demonstrates that while these borders confer related expression characteristics at most loci, their effect on chromatin organization is clearly distinct. Our results suggest that the activity of bordering elements is most pronounced for the abundant class of loci with a low but negligible expression potential in the case of highly expressed sites. By the RMCE procedure, we demonstrate that expression parameters are not due to a potential targeting action of bordering elements, in the sense that a linked transgene is directed into a special class of loci. Instead, we can relate the observed transcriptional augmentation phenomena to their function as genomic insulators.
A functional interaction between poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and lamin B has recently been proposed by nuclear fractionation, crosslinking, and immunoprecipitation experiments. Here we use fluorescence microscopy to verify and extend these findings. We analyze nuclear halo preparations by fluorescence in situ immuno staining (FISIS), which shares attributes with traditional nuclear fractionation techniques, and by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). The results agree in that a major part of the enzyme co-localizes with lamin B under physiological conditions, where PARP-1 only has basal activity. After DNA damage and the associated activation of PARP-1, and during the subsequent entry into apoptosis, dramatic changes occur: a gradual release of the enzyme from the lamina, accompanied by its accumulation in nucleoli. Our observations are in line with biochemical evidence for lamin B-PARP-1 interactions under physiological conditions and suggest ways by which these interactions are modified to support PARP-functions in damage and its fate in apoptosis.
The conventional string-based bioinformatic methods of genomic sequence analysis are often insufficient to identify DNA regulatory elements, since many of these do not have a recognizable motif. Even in case a sequence pattern is known to be associated with an element it may only partially mediate its function. This suggests that properties not correlated with the details of base sequence contribute to regulation. One of these attributes is the DNA strand-separation potential, known as SIDD (stress-induced duplex destabilization) which facilitates the access of tracking proteins and the formation of local secondary structures. Using the type 1 interferon gene cluster as a paradigm, we demonstrate that the imprints in a SIDD profile coincide with chromatin domain borders and with DNAse I hypersensitive sites to which regulatory potential could be assigned. The approach permits the computer-guided identification of yet unknown, mostly remote sites and the design of artificial elements with predictable properties for multiple applications.
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