The relationships among GC content, nucleosome occupancy, and exon size
Abstract
The average size of internal translated exons, ranging from 120 to 165 nt across metazoans, is approximately the size of the typical mononucleosome (147 nt). Genome-wide study has also shown that nucleosome occupancy is significantly higher in exons than in introns, which might indicate that the evolution of exon size is related to its nucleosome occupancy. By grouping exons by the GC contents of their flanking introns, we show that the average exon size is positively correlated with its GC content. Using the sequencing data from direct mapping of Homo sapiens nucleosomes with limited nuclease digestion, we show that the level of nucleosome occupancy is also positively correlated with the exon GC content in a similar fashion. We then demonstrated that exon size is positively correlated with their nucleosome occupancy. The strong correlation between exon size and the nucleosome occupancy suggests that chromatin organization may be related to the evolution of exon sizes.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.