The base pair-scale diffusion of nucleosomes modulates binding of transcription factors

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Abstract

The structure of promoter chromatin determines the ability of transcription factors (TFs) to bind to DNA and therefore has a profound effect on the expression levels of genes. However, the role of spontaneous nucleosome movements in this process is not fully understood. Here, we developed a single-molecule optical tweezers assay capable of simultaneously characterizing the base pair-scale diffusion of a nucleosome on DNA and the binding of a TF, using the luteinizing hormone β subunit gene (Lhb) promoter and Egr-1 as a model system. Our results demonstrate that nucleosomes undergo confined diffusion, and that the incorporation of the histone variant H2A.Z serves to partially relieve this confinement, inducing a different type of nucleosome repositioning. The increase in diffusion leads to exposure of a TF’s binding site and facilitates its association with the DNA, which, in turn, biases the subsequent movement of the nucleosome. Our findings suggest the use of mobile nucleosomes as a general transcriptional regulatory mechanism.

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Rudnizky, S., Khamis, H., Malik, O., Melamed, P., & Kaplan, A. (2019). The base pair-scale diffusion of nucleosomes modulates binding of transcription factors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(25), 12161–12166. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815424116

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