| Literature DB >> 28521766 |
Heike Wollmann1,2, Hume Stroud3,4, Ramesh Yelagandula5, Yoshiaki Tarutani6,7, Danhua Jiang5, Li Jing5,8, Bhagyshree Jamge5, Hidenori Takeuchi5, Sarah Holec1, Xin Nie1, Tetsuji Kakutani6,7,9, Steven E Jacobsen10,11,12, Frédéric Berger13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gene bodies of vertebrates and flowering plants are occupied by the histone variant H3.3 and DNA methylation. The origin and significance of these profiles remain largely unknown. DNA methylation and H3.3 enrichment profiles over gene bodies are correlated and both have a similar dependence on gene transcription levels. This suggests a mechanistic link between H3.3 and gene body methylation.Entities:
Keywords: Chromatin; DNA methylation; H2A.Z; H3.3; Histone variants; Linker histone H1
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28521766 PMCID: PMC5437678 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-017-1221-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1Knockdown of H3.3 causes various phenotypic defects and misregulation of response genes. a The impact of H3.3 knockdown on plant growth and development includes serrated leaf shape and smaller rosette size (left panel), partial sterility (middle panel) and reduced height (right panel) of flowering transgenic h3.3kd plants compared to wild type (Col-0). WT control plants (top row) are shown with two independent transgenic lines, both double homozygous for htr4 and htr8 (htr4/htr8) alleles with either pHTR5-amiR-HTR5-I (middle row; h3.3kd-1) or pHTR5-amiR-HTR5-II (bottom row; h3.3kd-3) artificial miRNAs. b The total number of significantly up- and downregulated genes in RNA-seq data from h3.3kd-3 compared to WT plants. c Summary of the Gene Ontology (GO) analysis of misregulated genes in h3.3kd-3 compared to WT. The bar graph represents the number of response related GO terms compared to others with p values less than 0.001. d Enrichment and p values for selected GO terms. The complete list can be found in Additional file 5. e Chromatin localization of H3K4me3, H3K27me3, and H3K9me2 in WT Col-0 and h3.3kd-2 plants as detected by immunofluorescence in nuclei isolated from mature leaves. DAPI staining shown in grey
Fig. 2Depletion of DNA methylation over gene bodies and H3.3-enriched regions in h3.3kd. a–d Genome-wide BS-seq results showing enrichment profiles of DNA methylation in WT, h3.3kd-2, and h3.3kd-3. a CG DNA methylation patterns over genes in WT plants. Genes were aligned from transcription start site (TSS) to transcription end site (TES) and grouped into quintiles according to their level of expression. b Relative CG methylation levels over gene bodies in h3.3kd compared to WT. Note pronounced loss of methylation at the 3′ ends of highly and moderately expressed genes. c, d DNA methylation levels in all contexts (CG, CHG, and CHH) over H3.3-enriched regions (c) and TEs (d) in WT and h3.3kd. e Expression of DNA methylation-related factors in WT compared to h3.3kd-3 (RNA-seq)
Fig. 3Loss of H3.3 impacts chromatin profiles of H2A.Z and H1. a, b ChIP-seq profiles depicting the enrichment of H2A.Z in WT and h3.3kd over all genes (a) and the differential profiles of h3.3kd versus WT over genes separated according to their level of expression (b). c Western blot on total H3 and H4 in Col-0 and h3.3kd plants. One of three replicates with similar results is shown. d Quantification of H3 and H4 protein abundance in Col-0 and h3.3kd plants from western blot analysis in three replicates. Bars represent standard deviation, n = 3. e, f ChIP-seq profiles depicting the enrichment of H1 in WT and h3.3kd over all genes (e) and the differential profiles of h3.3kd versus WT over genes separated according to expression level (f)