Nucleosome positioning as a determinant of exon recognition

Abstract
Chromatin influences transcription, but its effects on downstream processing have been less clear. Analyses of published high-throughput data examining nucleosomal positions in T cell and C. elegans genomes now indicates that intron-exon architecture is reflected in nucleosome occupancy. Chromatin structure influences transcription, but its role in subsequent RNA processing is unclear. Here we present analyses of high-throughput data that imply a relationship between nucleosome positioning and exon definition. First, we have found stable nucleosome occupancy within human and Caenorhabditis elegans exons that is stronger in exons with weak splice sites. Conversely, we have found that pseudoexons—intronic sequences that are not included in mRNAs but are flanked by strong splice sites—show nucleosome depletion. Second, the ratio between nucleosome occupancy within and upstream from the exons correlates with exon-inclusion levels. Third, nucleosomes are positioned central to exons rather than proximal to splice sites. These exonic nucleosomal patterns are also observed in non-expressed genes, suggesting that nucleosome marking of exons exists in the absence of transcription. Our analysis provides a framework that contributes to the understanding of splicing on the basis of chromatin architecture.