High-resolution, genome-wide mapping of positive supercoiling in chromosomes

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Abstract

Supercoiling impacts DNA replication, transcription, protein binding to DNA, and the threedimensional organization of chromosomes. However, there are currently no methods to directly interrogate or map positive supercoils, so their distribution in genomes remains unknown. Here, we describe a method, GapR-seq, based on the chromatin immunoprecipitation of GapR, a bacterial protein that preferentially recognizes overtwisted DNA, for generating high-resolution maps of positive supercoiling. Applying this method to E. coli and S. cerevisiae, we find that positive supercoiling is widespread, associated with transcription, and particularly enriched between convergently-oriented genes, consistent with the “twin-domain” model of supercoiling. In yeast, we also find positive supercoils associated with centromeres, cohesin binding sites, autonomously replicating sites, and the borders of R-loops (DNA-RNA hybrids). Our results suggest that GapR-seq is a powerful approach, likely applicable in any organism, to investigate aspects of chromosome structure and organization not accessible by Hi-C or other existing methods.

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Guo, M. S., Kawamura, R., Littlehale, M., Marko, J. F., & Laub, M. T. (2021). High-resolution, genome-wide mapping of positive supercoiling in chromosomes. ELife, 10. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.67236

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