Separation and detection of functionally distinct genomic regions. In general, SGD-annotated ORFs are printed on the top half of each sector, and intergenic regions are printed on the bottom half. (Left) DNA remaining in the aqueous fraction after phenol extraction of crosslinked extract (red) was hybridized comparatively with DNA remaining in the aqueous fraction after phenol extraction of crosslinked solubilized chromatin whose crosslinks had been reversed before extraction (green). Therefore, both intergenic enrichment (red) and ORF enrichment (green) are being assayed simultaneously (Experiment 24, jdl_g_111E). To confirm the separable enrichment observed in each channel, each sample was analyzed independently relative to a standard DNA reference (Fig. 4, Experiments 20 and 29). (Right) An enlarged view of two sectors. Genomic fragments corresponding to YHR145C, YBL044W, YDR250C, YGR164W, and YHR173C segregated anomalously. All are short ORFs for which there is no evidence for transcription. However, there were exceptions: arrayed elements GPG1 and RRN5 detected anomalous fractionation of confirmed protein-coding genes. (Lower) Despite differences in expression level during log-phase growth in dextrose (32), RPL17A, GAL1, and GAL7 segregated similarly in both enrichment procedures. Mitochondrial DNA, which is nucleosome-free, was the most heavily enriched class of DNA in the crosslinked-chromatin phenol extraction procedure.