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SRX5447128: GSM3636364: S_Mf_2; Methanothermus fervidus; MNase-Seq
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina MiSeq) run: 8.8M spots, 1.4G bases, 730.1Mb downloads

Submitted by: NCBI (GEO)
Study: The role of archaeal histones in gene expression - a synthetic biology perspective [Methanothermus fervidus]
show Abstracthide Abstract
Since their discovery, archaea have not only proven a fascinating domain in their own right, but also helped us understand the evolution and function of molecular components they share with bacteria or eukaryotes. Archaeal histones are homologous to their eukaryotic counterparts, but operate in a less constrained bacterial-like cellular environment and their role in transcription and genome function remains obscure. In order to understand how archaeal histones affect transcriptional processes, we induced expression of the two histones from the archaeon Methanothermus fervidus in a naive bacterial system (E. coli) that has not evolved to integrate this kind of proteins. We show, using a series of MNase digestion experiments, that these histones bind the bacterial genome and wrap DNA in vivo in a pattern consistent with a previously proposed multimerisation model, in a similar pattern observed natively. We correlate genome-wide occupancy maps and gene expression profiles in different phases of growth to show that – although expression of archaeal histones triggers morphological changes in E. coli – there appears to only be an indirect effect on transcription. Since their discovery, archaea have not only proven a fascinating domain in their own right, but also helped us understand the evolution and function of molecular components they share with bacteria or eukaryotes. Archaeal histones are homologous to their eukaryotic counterparts, but operate in a less constrained bacterial-like cellular environment and their role in transcription and genome function remains obscure. In order to understand how archaeal histones affect transcriptional processes, we induced expression of the two histones from the archaeon Methanothermus fervidus in a naive bacterial system (E. coli) that has not evolved to integrate this kind of proteins. We show, using a series of MNase digestion experiments, that these histones bind the bacterial genome and wrap DNA in vivo in a pattern consistent with a previously proposed multimerisation model, in a similar pattern observed natively. We correlate genome-wide occupancy maps and gene expression profiles in different phases of growth to show that – although expression of archaeal histones triggers morphological changes in E. coli – there appears to only be an indirect effect on transcription. Overall design: Correlation between genome-wide occupancy of the archaeal histones HMfA and HMfB in E.coli and transcriptional changed triggered by their expression, coupled with comparison between the histones' binding patterns in Methanothermus fervidus and E. coli.
Sample: S_Mf_2
SAMN11040598 • SRS4424133 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Instrument: Illumina MiSeq
Strategy: MNase-Seq
Source: GENOMIC
Selection: MNase
Layout: SINGLE
Construction protocol: DNA was extracted by phenol chloroform extraction and precipitated with ethanol. For MNase digestion experiments single-end reads were prepared using the NEBNext Ultra II DNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina.
Experiment attributes:
GEO Accession: GSM3636364
Links:
Runs: 1 run, 8.8M spots, 1.4G bases, 730.1Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR86493498,835,3121.4G730.1Mb2019-03-13

ID:
7363478

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