Replication timing, chromosomal bands, and isochores
- Laboratory of Molecular Evolution, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Villa Comunale, 80121 Naples, Italy
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Edited by Gary Felsenfeld, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD, and approved January 6, 2008 (received for review November 7, 2007)
Abstract
Chromosome replication timing is biphasic (early–late) in the cell cycle of vertebrates and of most (possibly all) eukaryotes. In the present work we have compared the extended, detailed replication timing maps that are available, namely those of human chromosomes 6, 11q, and 21q, with chromosomal bands as visualized at low (400 bands), high (850 bands), and highest (3,200 isochores) resolution. We have observed that the replicons located in a given isochore practically always show either all early or all late replication timing and that early-replicating isochores are short and GC-rich and late-replicating isochores are long and GC-poor. In the vast majority of cases, replicons are clustered in isochores, which are themselves most often clustered in early- or late-replication timing zones and may often reach the size of high-resolution bands and, very rarely, even that of low-resolution bands. Finally, we show that our results should be representative for the whole human genome and thus help to predict replication timing zones in all chromosomes.
Footnotes
- *To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bernardi{at}szn.it
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Author contributions: G.B. designed research; M.C. performed research; and M.C. and G.B. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0710587105/DC1.
- © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





