Absolute nucleosome occupancy map for the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Elisa Oberbeckmann
  • Michael Wolff
  • Krietenstein, Nils
  • Mark Heron
  • Jessica L Ellins
  • Andrea Schmid
  • Stefan Krebs
  • Helmut Blum
  • Ulrich Gerland
  • Philipp Korber

Mapping of nucleosomes, the basic DNA packaging unit in eukaryotes, is fundamental for understanding genome regulation because nucleosomes modulate DNA access by their positioning along the genome. A cell-population nucleosome map requires two observables: nucleosome positions along the DNA ("Where?") and nucleosome occupancies across the population ("In how many cells?"). All available genome-wide nucleosome mapping techniques are yield methods because they score either nucleosomal (e.g., MNase-seq, chemical cleavage-seq) or nonnucleosomal (e.g., ATAC-seq) DNA but lose track of the total DNA population for each genomic region. Therefore, they only provide nucleosome positions and maybe compare relative occupancies between positions, but cannot measure absolute nucleosome occupancy, which is the fraction of all DNA molecules occupied at a given position and time by a nucleosome. Here, we established two orthogonal and thereby cross-validating approaches to measure absolute nucleosome occupancy across the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome via restriction enzymes and DNA methyltransferases. The resulting high-resolution (9-bp) map shows uniform absolute occupancies. Most nucleosome positions are occupied in most cells: 97% of all nucleosomes called by chemical cleavage-seq have a mean absolute occupancy of 90 ± 6% (±SD). Depending on nucleosome position calling procedures, there are 57,000 to 60,000 nucleosomes per yeast cell. The few low absolute occupancy nucleosomes do not correlate with highly transcribed gene bodies, but correlate with increased presence of the nucleosome-evicting chromatin structure remodeling (RSC) complex, and are enriched upstream of highly transcribed or regulated genes. Our work provides a quantitative method and reference frame in absolute terms for future chromatin studies.

Original languageEnglish
JournalGenome Research
Volume29
Issue number12
Pages (from-to)1996-2009
Number of pages14
ISSN1088-9051
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

© 2019 Oberbeckmann et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

    Research areas

  • Chromosome Mapping, DNA, Fungal/genetics, Genome, Fungal, Nucleosomes/genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics

ID: 301925783