Research

Broad domains of histone marks in the highly compact Paramecium macronuclear genome

    • 1 University of Wuppertal;
    • 2 Saarland University;
    • 3 Goethe-University Frankfurt
Published March 9, 2022. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.276126.121
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cover of Genome Research Vol 36 Issue 4
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Abstract

The unicellular ciliate Paramecium contains a large vegetative macronucleus with several unusual characteristics including an extremely high coding density and high polyploidy. As macronculear chromatin is devoid of heterochromatin our study characterizes the functional epigenomic organization necessary for gene regulation and proper Pol II activity. Histone marks (H3K4me3, H3K9ac, H3K27me3) revealed no narrow peaks but broad domains along gene bodies, whereas intergenic regions were devoid of nucleosomes. Our data implicates H3K4me3 levels inside ORFs to be the main factor to associate with gene expression and H3K27me3 appears in association with H3K4me3 in plastic genes. Silent and lowly expressed genes show low nucleosome occupancy suggesting that gene inactivation does not involve increased nucleosome occupancy and chromatin condensation. Due to a high occupancy of Pol II along highly expressed ORFs, transcriptional elongation appears to be quite different to other species. This is supported by missing heptameric repeats in the C-terminal domain of Pol II and a divergent elongation system. Our data implies that unoccupied DNA is the default state, whereas gene activation requires nucleosome recruitment together with broad domains of H3K4me3. In summary, gene activation and silencing in Paramecium run counter to the current understanding of chromatin biology.

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