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Mapping the Human Proteome with Physical Access to DNA

Mapping the Human Proteome with Physical Access to DNA

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

In a human cell, DNA is packed in histones, RNA, and chromatin-associated proteins, forming a cohesive gel. At any given moment, only a specific subset of the proteome has physical access to the DNA and organizes its structure, transcription, replication, repair and other molecular functions essential to the way the genome is read and maintained. We have developed a zero-distance photo-crosslinking approach to quantify proteins in direct contact with DNA in living cells. Collecting DNA interactomes from human breast cancer cells, we present an atlas of over one thousand proteins with physical access to DNA, and hundreds of peptide-nucleotide crosslinks pinpointing protein-DNA interfaces with single amino-acid resolution. Differential comparisons of DNA interactomes from cells undergoing treatment with estrogen or genotoxic chemotherapy recapitulated the recruitment of key transcription factors and DNA damage proteins. This opens a direct way to explore genomic regulation in a hypothesis-free manner, applicable to many organisms and systems.

Kuster Bernhard、Trendel Simon、Trendel Jakob、Sha Shuyao

10.1101/2024.04.04.588092

生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术基础医学分子生物学

Kuster Bernhard,Trendel Simon,Trendel Jakob,Sha Shuyao.Mapping the Human Proteome with Physical Access to DNA[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-14].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.04.04.588092.点此复制

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