<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<STUDY_SET xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
  <STUDY center_name="GEO" alias="GSE106732" accession="SRP124720">
    <IDENTIFIERS>
      <PRIMARY_ID>SRP124720</PRIMARY_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="BioProject" label="primary">PRJNA417814</EXTERNAL_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="GEO">GSE106732</EXTERNAL_ID>
    </IDENTIFIERS>
    <DESCRIPTOR>
      <STUDY_TITLE>CHRAC/ACF Contribute to the Repressive Ground State of Chromatin [RNA-seq]</STUDY_TITLE>
      <STUDY_TYPE existing_study_type="Transcriptome Analysis"/>
      <STUDY_ABSTRACT>The chromatin remodeling complexes CHRAC and ACF combine the ATPase ISWI with the signature subunit ACF1. These enzymes catalyze well-studied nucleosome sliding reactions in vitro, but how their actions affect physiological gene expression is unclear. Here we explored the influence of Drosophila CHRAC/ACF on transcription by complementary gain- and loss-of-function approaches. Targeting ACF1 to multiple reporter genes inserted at many different genomic locations revealed a context-dependent inactivation of poorly transcribed reporters in repressive chromatin. Accordingly, single-embryo transcriptome analysis of a Acf knock-out allele showed that only lowly expressed genes are de-repressed in the absence of ACF1. Finally, the nucleosome arrays in Acf-deficient chromatin show loss of physiological regularity, particularly in transcriptionally inactive domains. Taken together our results highlight that ACF1-containing remodeling factors contribute to the establishment of an inactive ground state of the genome through chromatin organization. Overall design: Comparison of Acf mutant embryos to wild-type (Oregon-R) in two embryonic stages</STUDY_ABSTRACT>
      <CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>GSE106732</CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>
    </DESCRIPTOR>
    <STUDY_LINKS>
      <STUDY_LINK>
        <XREF_LINK>
          <DB>pubmed</DB>
          <ID>30456345</ID>
        </XREF_LINK>
      </STUDY_LINK>
    </STUDY_LINKS>
    <STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
      <STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
        <TAG>parent_bioproject</TAG>
        <VALUE>PRJNA417803</VALUE>
      </STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
    </STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
  </STUDY>
</STUDY_SET>
