SGD Paper Help



Radman-Livaja M, et al.  (2011) Patterns and mechanisms of ancestral histone protein inheritance in budding yeast. PLoS Biol 9(6):e1001075

Abstract: Replicating chromatin involves disruption of histone-DNA contacts and subsequent reassembly of maternal histones on the new daughter genomes. In bulk, maternal histones are randomly segregated to the two daughters, but little is known about the fine details of this process: do maternal histones re-assemble at preferred locations or close to their original loci? Here, we use a recently developed method for swapping epitope tags to measure the disposition of ancestral histone H3 across the yeast genome over six generations. We find that ancestral H3 is preferentially retained at the 5' ends of most genes, with strongest retention at long, poorly transcribed genes. We recapitulate these observations with a quantitative model in which the majority of maternal histones are reincorporated within 400 bp of their pre-replication locus during replication, with replication-independent replacement and transcription-related retrograde nucleosome movement shaping the resulting distributions of ancestral histones. We find a key role for Topoisomerase I in retrograde histone movement during transcription, and we find that loss of Chromatin Assembly Factor-1 affects replication-independent turnover. Together, these results show that specific loci are enriched for histone proteins first synthesized several generations beforehand, and that maternal histones re-associate close to their original locations on daughter genomes after replication. Our findings further suggest that accumulation of ancestral histones could play a role in shaping histone modification patterns.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article PubMed ID: 21666805

Topics addressed in this paper

Number of different genes curated to this paper: 6

  • To find other papers on a gene and topic, click on the colored ball in the appropriate box.
  • displays other papers with information about that topic for that gene.
  • displays other papers in SGD that are associated with that topic.
    The topic is addressed in these papers but does not describe a specific gene or chromosomal feature.
  • To go to the Locus page for a gene, click on the gene name.
Topics Topics not linked to Genes Genes linked to topics
HHF1 HHF2 HHT1 HHT2 POL30 RLF2
Additional Literature blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball
Cellular Location blue ball blue ball
Computational analysis yg ball
Mutants/Phenotypes blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball
Omics yg ball
Primary Literature blue ball blue ball
Regulation of blue ball blue ball
Strains/Constructs blue ball blue ball

Author Searches

To find contact information or other publications by the authors of this paper, follow these three steps:
  1. (1) Choose an author,
  2. (2) Choose a search parameter,
  3. (3) Click to implement