Light-based footprinting of a eukaryotic genome
Linnea Ögren, Isabella Muylaert, Kerryn Elliott, Erik Larsson
Identification of protein-bound DNA sites is key to understanding genome function and regulation, but studying protein-DNA interactions in living, unperturbed cells remains challenging. UV footprinting has been used to study such interactions in vivo by detecting changes in DNA photoproduct formation at protein-bound sites, but only on a limited scale. Here, we describe whole-genome deamination sequencing (Deam-seq), wherein photoproducts (pyrimidine dimers) induced by UV irradiation are revealed as mutations, enabling generation of quantitative photofootprints of the yeast