Author
Listed:
- Leo Zeitler
- Cyril Denby Wilkes
- Arach Goldar
- Julie Soutourina
Abstract
The great advances of sequencing technologies allow the in vivo measurement of nuclear processes—such as DNA repair after UV exposure—over entire cell populations. However, data sets usually contain only a few samples over several hours, missing possibly important information in between time points. We developed a data-driven approach to analyse CPD repair kinetics over time in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In contrast to other studies that consider sequencing signals as an average behaviour, we understand them as the superposition of signals from independent cells. By motivating repair as a stochastic process, we derive a minimal model for which the parameters can be conveniently estimated. We correlate repair parameters to a variety of genomic features that are assumed to influence repair, including transcription rate and nucleosome density. The clearest link was found for the transcription unit length, which has been unreported for budding yeast to our knowledge. The framework hence allows a comprehensive analysis of nuclear processes on a population scale.Author summary: As DNA encodes our very identity, it has been subject to a plethora of studies over the last century. The advent of new technologies that permit rapid sequencing of large DNA and RNA samples opened doors to before unknown mechanisms and interactions on a genomic scale. This led to an in-depth analysis of several nuclear processes, including transcription of genes and lesion repair. However, the applied protocols do not allow a high temporal resolution. Quite the contrary, the experiments yield often only some few data signals over several hours. The details of the dynamics between time points are chiefly ignored, implicitly assuming that they straightforwardly transition from one to another. Here, we show that such an understanding can be flawed. We use the repair process of UV-induced DNA damage as an example to present a quantitative analysis framework that permits the representation of the entire temporal process. We subsequently describe how they can be linked to other heterogeneous data sets. Consequently, we evaluate a correlation to the whole kinetic process rather than to a single time point. Although the approach is exemplified using DNA repair, it can be readily applied to any other mechanism and sequencing data that represent a transition between two states, such as damaged and repaired.
Suggested Citation
Leo Zeitler & Cyril Denby Wilkes & Arach Goldar & Julie Soutourina, 2022.
"A quantitative modelling approach for DNA repair on a population scale,"
PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 18(9), pages 1-21, September.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1010488
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010488
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