University of Sussex
Browse

Osmotic disruption of chromatin induces Topoisomerase 2 activity at sites of transcriptional stress

Download (4.16 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-11, 10:18 authored by William GittensWilliam Gittens, Rachal M Allison, Ellie M Wright, George BrownGeorge Brown, Matt NealeMatt Neale
Transcription generates superhelical stress in DNA that poses problems for genome stability, but determining when and where such stress arises within chromosomes is challenging. Here, using G1-arrested S. cerevisiae cells, and employing rapid fixation and ultra-sensitive enrichment, we utilise the physiological activity of endogenous topoisomerase 2 (Top2) as a probe of transcription-induced superhelicity. We demonstrate that Top2 activity is surprisingly uncorrelated with transcriptional activity, suggesting that superhelical stress is obscured from Top2 within chromatin in vivo. We test this idea using osmotic perturbation-a treatment that transiently destabilises chromatin in vivo-revealing that Top2 activity redistributes within sub-minute timescales into broad zones patterned by long genes, convergent gene arrays, and transposon elements-and also by acute transcriptional induction. We propose that latent superhelical stress is normally absorbed by the intrinsic topological buffering capacity of chromatin, helping to avoid spurious topoisomerase activity arising within the essential coding regions of the genome.<p></p>

Funding

Elucidating Eukaryotic Topoisomerase III Activity: An Enzymatic Double-edged Sword : Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council | BB/V005081/1

Spatial regulation of meiotic recombination : WELLCOME TRUST | 200843/Z/16/Z

Spatiotemporal control of meiotic recombination : WELLCOME TRUST | 225852/Z/22/Z

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Nature Communications

ISSN

2041-1723

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Issue

1

Volume

15

Article number

10606

Department affiliated with

  • Sussex Centre for Genome Damage Stability Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes