Massively multiplex single-molecule oligonucleosome footprinting

Author:

Abdulhay Nour J1,McNally Colin P1,Hsieh Laura J1,Kasinathan Sivakanthan2,Keith Aidan1,Estes Laurel S1,Karimzadeh Mehran13ORCID,Underwood Jason G4,Goodarzi Hani15,Narlikar Geeta J1ORCID,Ramani Vijay15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry & Biophysics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, United States

2. Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Palo Alto, United States

3. Vector Institute, Toronto, United States

4. Pacific Biosciences of California Inc, Menlo Park, United States

5. Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, San Francisco, United States

Abstract

Our understanding of the beads-on-a-string arrangement of nucleosomes has been built largely on high-resolution sequence-agnostic imaging methods and sequence-resolved bulk biochemical techniques. To bridge the divide between these approaches, we present the single-molecule adenine methylated oligonucleosome sequencing assay (SAMOSA). SAMOSA is a high-throughput single-molecule sequencing method that combines adenine methyltransferase footprinting and single-molecule real-time DNA sequencing to natively and nondestructively measure nucleosome positions on individual chromatin fibres. SAMOSA data allows unbiased classification of single-molecular 'states' of nucleosome occupancy on individual chromatin fibres. We leverage this to estimate nucleosome regularity and spacing on single chromatin fibres genome-wide, at predicted transcription factor binding motifs, and across human epigenomic domains. Our analyses suggest that chromatin is comprised of both regular and irregular single-molecular oligonucleosome patterns that differ subtly in their relative abundance across epigenomic domains. This irregularity is particularly striking in constitutive heterochromatin, which has typically been viewed as a conformationally static entity. Our proof-of-concept study provides a powerful new methodology for studying nucleosome organization at a previously intractable resolution and offers up new avenues for modeling and visualizing higher order chromatin structure.

Funder

Sandler Foundation

American Cancer Society

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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