Paolo Norio
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Paolo Norio.
PLOS Biology | 2004
Paolo Norio; Carl L. Schildkraut
In mammalian cells, the activity of the sites of initiation of DNA replication appears to be influenced epigenetically, but this regulation is not fully understood. Most studies of DNA replication have focused on the activity of individual initiation sites, making it difficult to evaluate the impact of changes in initiation activity on the replication of entire genomic loci. Here, we used single molecule analysis of replicated DNA (SMARD) to study the latent duplication of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) episomes in human cell lines. We found that initiation sites are present throughout the EBV genome and that their utilization is not conserved in different EBV strains. In addition, SMARD shows that modifications in the utilization of multiple initiation sites occur across large genomic regions (tens of kilobases in size). These observations indicate that individual initiation sites play a limited role in determining the replication dynamics of the EBV genome. Long-range mechanisms and the genomic context appear to play much more important roles, affecting the frequency of utilization and the order of activation of multiple initiation sites. Finally, these results confirm that initiation sites are extremely redundant elements of the EBV genome. We propose that these conclusions also apply to mammalian chromosomes.
Journal of Virology | 2000
Paolo Norio; Carl L. Schildkraut; John L. Yates
ABSTRACT The 165-kb circularized chromosome of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is replicated in latently infected cells once per cell cycle by host proteins during S phase. Replication initiates at multiple sites on latent EBV chromosomes, including within a 1.8-kb region calledoriP, which can provide both replication and stabilization for recombinant plasmids in the presence of the EBV-encoded protein, EBNA-1. Replication initiates at or near the dyad symmetry component (DS) of oriP, which depends on multiple EBNA-1 binding sites for activity. To test the importance of the replication function of oriP, the DS was deleted from the viral genome. EBV mutants lacking the DS and carrying a selectable gene could establish latent infections in BL30 cells, in which circular, mutant viral chromosomes were stably maintained. Analysis of replication fork movement using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed that the deletion of the DS reduced the initiation events to an undetectable level within the oriP region so that this segment was replicated exclusively by forks entering the region from either direction. A significant slowing or stalling of replication forks that occurs normally at the approximate position of the DS was also eliminated by deletion of the DS. The results confirm the DS as both a replication origin and a place where replication forks pause. Since the replication function of oriP is dispensable at least in certain cell lines, the essential role of EBNA-1 for infection of these cell lines is likely to be that of stabilizing the EBV chromosome by associating with the 30-bp repeats of oriP. The results also imply that in established cell lines, the EBV chromosome can be efficiently replicated entirely from origins that are activated by cellular factors. Presumably, initiation of replication at the DS, mediated by EBNA-1, is important for the natural life cycle of EBV, perhaps in establishing latent infections of normal B cells.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2009
Zeqiang Guan; Christina M. Hughes; Settapong Kosiyatrakul; Paolo Norio; Ranjan Sen; Steven Fiering; C. David Allis; Eric E. Bouhassira; Carl L. Schildkraut
Experimental attempts to activate replication origins within the temporal transition region in the IgH locus in mouse embryonic stem cells were not successful, and thus, why and how they become activated in B cells remains unclear.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008
Vincenzo Giambra; Sabrina Volpi; Alexander V. Emelyanov; David L. Pflugh; Alfred L. M. Bothwell; Paolo Norio; Yuhong Fan; Zhongliang Ju; Arthur I. Skoultchi; Richard R. Hardy; Domenico Frezza; Barbara K. Birshtein
ABSTRACT The 3′ regulatory region (3′ RR) of the murine immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) locus contains multiple DNase I-hypersensitive (hs) sites. Proximal sites hs3A, hs1.2, and hs3B are located in an extensive palindromic region and together with hs4 are associated with enhancers involved in the expression and class switch recombination of IgH genes. Distal hs5, -6, and -7 sites located downstream of hs4 comprise a potential insulator for the IgH locus. In pro-B cells, hs4 to -7 are associated with marks of active chromatin, while hs3A, hs1.2, and hs3B are not. Our analysis of DNA methylation-sensitive restriction sites of the 3′ RR has revealed a similar modular pattern in pro-B cells; hs4 to -7 sites are unmethylated, while the palindromic region is methylated. This modular pattern of DNA methylation and histone modifications appears to be determined by at least two factors: the B-cell-specific transcription factor Pax5 and linker histone H1. In pre-B cells, a region beginning downstream of hs4 and extending into hs5 showed evidence of allele-specific demethylation associated with the expressed heavy chain allele. Palindromic enhancers become demethylated later in B-cell differentiation, in B and plasma cells.
PLOS Biology | 2012
Agnieszka Demczuk; Michel G. Gauthier; Ingrid Veras; Settapong Kosiyatrakul; Carl L. Schildkraut; Meinrad Busslinger; John Bechhoefer; Paolo Norio
The temporal order of replication of mammalian chromosomes appears to be linked to their functional organization, but the process that establishes and modifies this order during cell differentiation remains largely unknown. Here, we studied how the replication of the Igh locus initiates, progresses, and terminates in bone marrow pro-B cells undergoing B cell commitment. We show that many aspects of DNA replication can be quantitatively explained by a mechanism involving the stochastic firing of origins (across the S phase and the Igh locus) and extensive variations in their firing rate (along the locus). The firing rate of origins shows a high degree of coordination across Igh domains that span tens to hundreds of kilobases, a phenomenon not observed in simple eukaryotes. Differences in domain sizes and firing rates determine the temporal order of replication. During B cell commitment, the expression of the B-cell-specific factor Pax5 sharply alters the temporal order of replication by modifying the rate of origin firing within various Igh domains (particularly those containing Pax5 binding sites). We propose that, within the Igh CH-3′RR domain, Pax5 is responsible for both establishing and maintaining high rates of origin firing, mostly by controlling events downstream of the assembly of pre-replication complexes.
EMBO Reports | 2006
Paolo Norio
Now that the genomes of various metazoans have been sequenced, one of the biggest challenges in biology is to understand their functional organization. Programmed alterations of gene expression during development and cell differentiation frequently involve long‐range modifications in the organization of chromosomal loci. These modifications include nuclear localization, genetic locus conformation (for example, looping), replication timing, chromatin organization, DNA methylation and many others. These features seem to be cell‐type‐ or differentiation‐stage‐specific and are frequently inherited during cell division. However, their relationship to the regulation of gene expression remains largely unknown. Two studies published in this issue of EMBO reports now show that, in cells of vertebrate animals, changes in gene expression are also accompanied by modifications in the activity of DNA origins of replication (Dazy et al , 2006; Gregoire et al , 2006). These studies raise the possibility that origin regulation is part of the mechanism that integrates changes in gene expression with cell proliferation in various developmental contexts. Until recently, DNA origins of replication were seen as stable entities of eukaryotic chromosomes with specific origins required to replicate particular parts of the genome—known as replicons. This vision has evolved slowly to accommodate an increasing body of evidence indicating that gene loci frequently contain several origins that are used at relatively low frequencies (initiation zones; reviewed by Gilbert, 2004). This means that a specific genomic region can be replicated by different origins in different cells, or in different alleles—a phenomenon that could explain the asynchronous replication of many gene loci in mammalian nuclei (Norio et al , 2005). The two new studies support this vision by showing that both the chicken β‐globin and the mouse HoxB loci contain several active origins. In addition, they help to bring into focus another aspect of origin plasticity in metazoans. Previous studies have shown that …
PLOS ONE | 2012
Michel G. Gauthier; Paolo Norio; John Bechhoefer
In eukaryotic organisms, DNA replication is initiated at a series of chromosomal locations called origins, where replication forks are assembled proceeding bidirectionally to replicate the genome. The distribution and firing rate of these origins, in conjunction with the velocity at which forks progress, dictate the program of the replication process. Previous attempts at modeling DNA replication in eukaryotes have focused on cases where the firing rate and the velocity of replication forks are homogeneous, or uniform, across the genome. However, it is now known that there are large variations in origin activity along the genome and variations in fork velocities can also take place. Here, we generalize previous approaches to modeling replication, to allow for arbitrary spatial variation of initiation rates and fork velocities. We derive rate equations for left- and right-moving forks and for replication probability over time that can be solved numerically to obtain the mean-field replication program. This method accurately reproduces the results of DNA replication simulation. We also successfully adapted our approach to the inverse problem of fitting measurements of DNA replication performed on single DNA molecules. Since such measurements are performed on specified portion of the genome, the examined DNA molecules may be replicated by forks that originate either within the studied molecule or outside of it. This problem was solved by using an effective flux of incoming replication forks at the model boundaries to represent the origin activity outside the studied region. Using this approach, we show that reliable inferences can be made about the replication of specific portions of the genome even if the amount of data that can be obtained from single-molecule experiments is generally limited.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Elisabeth Ott; Paolo Norio; Marion Ritzi; Carl L. Schildkraut; Aloys Schepers
OriP, the latent origin of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), consists of two essential elements: the dyad symmetry (DS) and the family of repeats (FR). The function of these elements has been predominantly analyzed in plasmids transfected into transformed cells. Here, we examined the molecular functions of DS in its native genomic context and at an ectopic position in the mini-EBV episome. Mini-EBV plasmids contain 41% of the EBV genome including all information required for the proliferation of human B cells. Both FR and DS function independently of their genomic context. We show that DS is the most active origin of replication present in the mini-EBV genome regardless of its location, and it is characterized by the binding of the origin recognition complex (ORC) allowing subsequent replication initiation. Surprisingly, the integrity of oriP is not required for the formation of the pre-replicative complex (pre-RC) at or near DS. In addition we show that initiation events occurring at sites other than the DS are also limited to once per cell cycle and that they are ORC-dependent. The deletion of DS increases initiation from alternative origins, which are normally used very infrequently in the mini-EBV genome. The sequence-independent distribution of ORC-binding, pre-RC-assembly, and initiation patterns indicates that a large number of silent origins are present in the mini-EBV genome. We conclude that, in mini-EBV genomes lacking the DS element, the absence of a strong ORC binding site results in an increase of ORC binding at dispersed sites.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009
Agnieszka Demczuk; Paolo Norio
In metazoans, development and cell differentiation are known to affect various aspects of chromosomal organization at developmentally regulated gene loci (e.g., nuclear localization, locus accessibility, chromatin modifications, etc.). Recent evidence also indicates that cell differentiation can have dramatic effects on DNA replication initiation and replication fork progression, at several of these loci. Hence, origin selection and activation are no longer viewed as constitutive events, but as actively regulated processes, the deregulation of which could potentially affect gene expression and genomic stability at particular chromosomal locations. For these reasons, the study of DNA replication across large genomic regions has recently received increasing attention. Here we describe an assay based on the analysis of single DNA molecules that can be used to determine the steady-state distribution of replication forks across large genomic regions. This assay can be used to study how DNA replication initiates, progresses, pauses, and terminates at single-copy loci in mammalian cells.
Molecular Cell | 2005
Paolo Norio; Settapong Kosiyatrakul; Qiaoxin Yang; Zeqiang Guan; Nicholas M. Brown; Sharon Thomas; Roy Riblet; Carl L. Schildkraut