| Literature DB >> 23031785 |
J Annelies E Polman1, Jennifer E Welten, Danny S Bosch, Robert T de Jonge, Judit Balog, Silvère M van der Maarel, E Ronald de Kloet, Nicole A Datson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucocorticoids, secreted by the adrenals in response to stress, profoundly affect structure and plasticity of neurons. Glucocorticoid action in neurons is mediated by glucocorticoid receptors (GR) that operate as transcription factors in the regulation of gene expression and either bind directly to genomic glucocorticoid response elements (GREs) or indirectly to the genome via interactions with bound transcription factors. These two modes of action, respectively called transactivation and transrepression, result in the regulation of a wide variety of genes important for neuronal function. The objective of the present study was to identify genome-wide glucocorticoid receptor binding sites in neuronal PC12 cells using Chromatin ImmunoPrecipitation combined with next generation sequencing (ChIP-Seq).Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23031785 PMCID: PMC3519639 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-13-118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Figure 1Genomic distribution of Glucocorticoid Receptor binding sites (GBS) upstream of the Tyrosine Hydroxylase gene (TH). Two significant peaks representing GR-binding are observed at approximately 5.7 kb (peak 1) and 19.7 kb (peak 3) upstream of the transcription start site (TSS) as indicated by arrows. The 5.7 kb GBS was previously described in PC12 cells transfected with the TH promoter [34]. A third peak (peak 2) upstream of the TH gene was apparent, but was not significantly above background (IgG signal) at this position, so was not further analysed. Data was visualized with the UCSC genome browser [35].
Figure 2Genomic distribution of GBS relative to nearby genes.A The percentage of GBS that are present intragenically or within a certain range from the nearest gene are indicated, showing that the number of GBS located within a gene is highest. B Intragenic GBS can be further subdivided into subregions: 5’UTR (exon or intron), intron, exon, intron/exon overlap and 3’UTR regions.
Top 50 of significance GR-binding sites
| 1 | chr14 | 92730207 | 92730300 | 0 | 58382 | ddc | dopa decarboxylase |
| 2 | chr12 | 4225730 | 4225800 | 0 | 41349 | N4BP2L2 | NEDD4 binding protein 2-like 2 |
| 3 | chr8 | 84942839 | 84942945 | 6.66E-16 | −40027 | FILIP1 | filamin A interacting protein 1 |
| 4 | chr3 | 159002303 | 159002377 | 3.44E-15 | −68132 | ptpn1 | protein tyrosine phosphate, non-receptor type 1 |
| 6 | chr20 | 44499841 | 44499940 | 1.25E-14 | −27572 | CDC2L6 | cell division cycle 2-like 6(CDK8-like) |
| chr1 | 208485510 | 208485587 | 2.67E-14 | 24399 | FRMD8 | FERM domain containing 8 | |
| 8 | chr10 | 55856373 | 55856471 | 1.24E-13 | −3428 | Per1 | period homolog 1 |
| 9 | chr10 | 95336367 | 95336493 | 1.82E-13 | −1827 | CYB561 | cytochrome b-561 |
| 10 | chr9 | 82139844 | 82139973 | 2.12E-13 | −22571 | AGFG1 | ArfGAP with FG repeats 1 |
| 11 | chr2 | 214126583 | 214126707 | 5.58E-13 | 119898 | snx7 | sorting nexin 7 |
| 16 | chr4 | 26732111 | 26732175 | 1.87E-10 | −20533 | cyp51 | cytochrome P450, subfamily 51 |
| 17 | chr1 | 203191165 | 203191336 | 2.39E-10 | −19745 | TH | tyrosine hydroxylase |
| 18 | chr3 | 159218917 | 159219016 | 2.51E-10 | −11706 | Pard6b | pa-6 (partitioning defective 6) homolog beta |
| 20 | chr13 | 98085339 | 98085424 | 8.73E-10 | −40128 | srp9 | signal recognition particle 9 |
| 21 | chr10 | 16132564 | 16132677 | 1.10E-09 | −105921 | LOC685957 | cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding protein 4 |
| 22 | chr1 | 128794365 | 128794456 | 2.01E-09 | −74086 | CHD2 | chromo domain helicase DNA binding protein 2 |
| 24 | chr14 | 99179170 | 99179253 | 3.03E-09 | −356843 | etaa1 | Ewing tumor-associated antigen 1; similar to ETAA16 protein |
| 25 | chr3 | 120538726 | 120538946 | 4.16E-09 | -32899 | CHGB | chromogranin B |
| 26 | chr16 | 36611065 | 36611165 | 5.78E-09 | −285078 | HAND2 | heart and neural crest derivatives expressed 2 |
| 27 | chr13 | 100632670 | 100632774 | 6.77E-09 | 58963 | hlx | H2.0-like homeobox |
| 28 | chr1 | 83486283 | 83486376 | 8.07E-09 | 2797 | ZFP36 | zinc finger protein 36 |
| 29 | chr2 | 242852558 | 242852668 | 1.23E-08 | 50854 | sh3glb1 | SH3-domain GRB2-like endophilin B1 |
| 30 | chr19 | 36308488 | 36308565 | 1.45E-08 | 36674 | Zfp90 | zinc finger protein 90 |
| 31 | chr2 | 218383549 | 218383633 | 1.75E-08 | 12542 | F3 | coagulation factor III (thromboplastin, tissue factor) |
| 32 | chr | 72391772 | 72391896 | 2.24E-08 | −85708 | YWHAZ | tyrosine 3-monooxygenase/tryptophan 5-monooxygenase activation protein, zeta polypeptide |
| 33 | chr10 | 63291887 | 6321961 | 2.45E-08 | −26356 | rph3al | rabphilin 3A-like (without C2 domains) |
| 34 | CHR1 | 203177190 | 203177316 | 3.19E-08 | −5747 | TH | tyrosine hydroxylase |
| 35 | chr8 | 121454771 | 121454890 | 4.05E-08 | −35296 | Snrk | SNF related kinase |
| 38 | chr10 | 19716893 | 19717068 | 6.83E-08 | −7100 | ccdc99 | coiled-coil domain containing 99 |
| 41 | chr2 | 240315238 | 240315326 | 8.89E-08 | −18368 | PDLIM5 | PDZ and LIM domain 5 |
| 42 | chr3 | 155445628 | 155445734 | 1.01E-07 | −503522 | Sdc4 | syndecan 4 |
| 43 | chr16 | 22356139 | 22356299 | 1.05E-07 | 19144 | SLC18A1 | solute carrier family 18 (vesicular monoamine), member 1 |
| 44 | chr10 | 75271499 | 75271582 | 1.65E-07 | −112174 | LOC688105 | hypothetical protein LOC688105; LOC360590 |
| 48 | chr8 | 68790635 | 68790830 | 2.10E-07 | −84 | Rab11a | RAB11a, member RAS oncogene family |
| 49 | chr8 | 44864109 | 44864180 | 3.27E-07 | 188782 | SORL1 | sortilin-related receptor, LDLR class A repeats-containing |
| 50 | chr8 | 124992930 | 124993041 | 4.02E-07 | 237699 | Cx3cr1 | chemokine (C-X3-C motif) receptor 1 |
The 50 most significant GR-binding sites (GBS) as determined by CLCbio workbench software. Per GBS, the p-value is indicated as well as the nearest gene and the distance relative to the Transcription Start Site (TSS) of this gene. Negative numbers indicate a location upstream of the TSS, positve numbers downsteam of the TSS. GBS that are located intragenically are indicated in bold print.
Figure 3Validation of GR binding sites and effects on mRNA expression. A ChIP-PCR validation of identified GBS, previously shown to be GR-targets in literature (grey bars) or representing newly identified GBS (black bars). The genes that are associated with the GBS are listed on the x-axis. The y-axis represents the % of input DNA that was bound by the GR after subtracting the aspecific IgG-bound fraction and the amount of GR bound after vehicle (VEH) treatment. The error bars represent the standard error of the mean (SEM) when comparing the DEX-induced GBS versus the VEH-induced GBS. An unpaired two-tailed T-test was used for statistics. B Diagram indicating whether the known GR-binding regions were previously detected in other published GR-ChIPseq studies based on BlastZ-based interspecies conservation (http://main.g2.bx.psu.edu/) [37]. The genomic locations corresponding to the GBS are listed in Additional file 3: Table S3 as region numbers 1 (Ddc), 7 (FRMD8), 8 (Per1), 11 (Snx7), 14 (Il20ra), 17 (Th), 75 (TLE3), 94 (Ddit4), 345 (Olr1735), 352 (Fndc7), 366 (Pik3r5), 526 (Cry2), 704 (Nfasc), 842 (Narg2), 976 (Kcnab1), 1020 (Ctsd). C mRNA expression of the genes associated with the validated GBS after DEX-treatment relative to VEH-treatment (100%). Expression was normalized against tubulin 2a mRNA expression. The non-parametric Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test was used for statistics.
Figure 4Venn diagram representing overlap between GR-targets in different ChIP-Seq studies. The overlap of GBS identified in PC12 cells is compared to those genomic regions bound by GR in two other ChIP-Seq studies in human lung carcinoma cells (A549) [26] and mouse adipocytes (3T3-L1) [27].
Top 10 enriched functional GO clusters in neuronal PC12-specific GR binding regions (GBS)
| 1 | neuron development | BP | 4.4 |
| 2 | cytoplasmic vesicle | CC | 3.4 |
| 3 | neuron projection | CC | 3.1 |
| 4 | metal ion binding | MF | 3.0 |
| 5 | blood vessel development | BP | 3.0 |
| 6 | cell motion | BP | 2.8 |
| 7 | identical protein binding | MF | 2.6 |
| 8 | biogenic amine biosynthetic process | BP | 2.6 |
| 9 | synapse | CC | 2.2 |
| 10 | protein tyrosine kinase activity | MF | 2.0 |
Gene ontology analysis of genes associated with GBS identified in neuronal PC12 cells. The 10 most enriched functional GO clusters in GBS that are uniquely found in neuronal PC12 cells. Analysis was performed with the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID). Per cluster, the first GO-term is shown. In addition, the category to which the GO term belongs to is indicated, i.e. Biological Processes (BP), Molecular Function (MF) or Cellular Compartment (CC). The enrichment score indicates the geometric mean (in -log scale) of p-value of the GO cluster.
Figure 5Significance of GR-binding sites with and without a GRE. GR binding sites containing a GRE-like sequence have smaller p-values in the ChIP-Seq data compared to those regions without a GRE. On the x-axis the 1183 GBS are ranked into BINs consisting of 100 binding regions ranked according to significance. For example, the 100 most significant GBS are represented in BIN 1 (1–100), while the 83 least significant GBS are represented in the last BIN (1101–1183). On the y-axis the percentage of GRE and non-GRE containing GBS per BIN is indicated.
Figure 6MEME de novo motif discovery within GBS. A. Motifs for transcription factor binding in the 683 GBS that contain a GRE-like sequence. B. Motifs for transcription factor binding in the 500 GBS without a GRE. Analysis was performed within a 200 bp-frame containing the GBS-centre in the middle. The frequency of identified motifs in the PC12-dataset is indicated as well as transcription factors of which the known binding motif most significantly matches the identified motif. Only motifs with an E-value < 1E-5 are depicted.
Figure 7The most frequent motif-combinations within the GBS. Specific combinations of motifs for transcription factor binding were observed, with differences in occurrence and frequency between the GBS with and without a GRE. TF: transcription factor.
Top 10 enriched functional GO clusters in GR binding regions(GBS) with and without a GRE
| 1 | cell motion | BP | 4.2 | neuron projection morphogenesis. | BP | 3.8 |
| 2 | protein kinase binding | MF | 3.5 | cytoplasmic vesicle | CC | 2.5 |
| 3 | vasculature development | BP | 3.3 | metal ion binding | MF | 2.4 |
| 4 | protein dimerization activity | MF | 2.9 | phospholipid binding | MF | 2.3 |
| 5 | metal ion binding | MF | 2.8 | catecholamine biosynthetic process | BP | 2.2 |
| 6 | regulation of apoptosis | BP | 2.3 | protein complex assembly | BP | 2.0 |
| 7 | apoptosis | BP | 2.2 | muscle cell development | BP | 1.9 |
| 8 | regulation of myeloid cell differentiation | BP | 2.1 | neuron projection regeneration | BP | 1.6 |
| 9 | cell adhesion | BP | 1.9 | actin filament binding | MF | 1.6 |
| 10 | cytoplasmic vesicle | CC | 1.8 | synaptic transmission | BP | 1.6 |
The 10 most enriched functional GO clusters in GBS that do or do not contain a GRE according to the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID). In both cases the GO-term that best represents the annotation cluster is shown. In addition, the category to which the GO term belongs to is indicated, i.e. Biological Processes (BP), Molecular Function (MF) or Cellular Compartment (CC). The enrichment score indicates the geometric mean (in -log scale) of p-value of the GO cluster.