Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells: control vs positive supercoiling accumulation after 0, 30 and 120 min
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA123503)
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA123503)
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Project name: Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Description: Positive DNA helical stress accumulates in vivo by the unbalanced relaxation of positive and negative DNA supercoils in Δtop1, top2ts, pGPD:TopA yeast cells. The resulting overwinding of DNA greatly diminishes overall RNA synthesis. Here we show that whereas most genes reduce their transcript levels by several fold, genes situated at less than 100 kb from the chromosomal ends (near 15% of the genome) are gradually unaffected. This positional effect denotes that chromosomal ends are topologically open, thus precluding the accumulation of DNA helical stress in telomere-proximal regions. The progressive escape from the transcription stall observed in all the chromosome extremities indicates also that friction restrictions to DNA twist diffusion, rather than tight topological boundaries, suffice to confine DNA helical tension along eukaryotic chromatin.Keywords: Time course of positive helical tension accumulation.Overall design: Two-condition experiment: delta top1-TOPA vs delta top1 top2-ts-TOPA. 3 time points: 0min, 30min, 120min. 3 biological replicates per condition and time point, independently grown in leu- selective media and harvested.
Data type: Transcriptome or Gene expression
Sample scope: Multiisolate
Relevance: ModelOrganism
Organization: Environmental Toxicology, IDAEA-CSIC
Release date: 2009-12-01
Last updated: 2009-09-23