| Literature DB >> 29432129 |
John S Runge1,2,3, Jesse R Raab3, Terry Magnuson4,2,3.
Abstract
Chromatin remodeling and histone modifying enzymes play a critical role in shaping the regulatory output of a cell. Although much is known about these classes of proteins, identifying the mechanisms by which they coordinate gene expression programs remains an exciting topic of investigation. One factor that may contribute to the targeting and activity of chromatin regulators is local chromatin landscape. We leveraged genomic approaches and publically-available datasets to characterize the chromatin landscape at targets of the human INO80 chromatin remodeling complex (INO80-C). Our data revealed two classes of INO80-C targets with distinct chromatin signatures. The predominant INO80-C class was enriched for open chromatin, H3K27ac, and representative subunits from each of the three INO80-C modules (RUVBL1, RUVBL2, MCRS1, YY1). We named this class Canonical INO80. Notably, we identified an unexpected class of INO80-C targets that contained only the INO80 ATPase and harbored a repressive chromatin signature characterized by inaccessible chromatin, H3K27me3, and the methyltransferase EZH2. We named this class Non-Canonical INO80 (NC-INO80). Biochemical approaches indicated that INO80-C and the H3K27 acetyltransferase P300 physically interact, suggesting INO80-C and P300 may jointly coordinate chromatin accessibility at Canonical INO80 sites. No interaction was detected between INO80-C and EZH2, indicating INO80-C and EZH2 may engage in a separate form of regulatory crosstalk at NC-INO80 targets. Our data indicate that INO80-C is more compositionally heterogenous at its genomic targets than anticipated. Moreover, our data suggest there is an important link between INO80-C and histone modifying enzymes that may have consequences in developmental and pathological contexts.Entities:
Keywords: Genome Report; H3K27ac; H3K27me3; INO80 Complex; P300; Polycomb Repressive Complex 2
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29432129 PMCID: PMC5873900 DOI: 10.1534/g3.117.300504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Genomic Occupancy of INO80-C Members Reveals Two Distinct Types of Sites. A. Schematic of INO80 protein and locations of binding modules, proteins mapped by ChIP-seq are highlighted in red. B. Genomic distribution of INO80-C members. C. ChIP-seq signal of INO80-C subunits aligned relative to gene units (-1.5kb upstream to +1kb downstream). Rows are ordered based on expression of all expressed genes in HepG2 cells (n = 17157). D. ChIP-seq signal example of Canonical INO80 and NC-INO80 sites. E. Metagene plots of signal for INO80 and 4 others mapped INO80-C subunits aligned to midpoint of NC-INO80 and Canonical INO80 sites (n = 4949 NC-INO80, n = 18716 Canonical).
Figure 2Characterization of Chromatin Features at Canonical and Non-Canonical INO80 Sites. A. DNase signal at each class of peaks generated using ENCODE Data (Accession #ENCSR149XIL). B. Fraction of INO80 peaks from each class that are localized to different types of ChromHMM states (Ernst ). C. Metaplots centered on Canonical INO80 and NC-INO80 sites for EZH2, H3K27me3, and H3K27ac. Data were generated by ENCODE (Accessions ENCSR000ARI, ENCSR000AOL, ENCSR000AMO).
Figure 3Expression of Genes near INO80 Targets Correlates with Local Chromatin State A. Gene expression in HepG2 of genes assigned by linear distance to INO80 peaks. Genes with assignments to peaks of both Canonical INO80 and NC-INO80 peaks were excluded.
Figure 4INO80 Interacts with the Histone Acetyltransferase P300. A, B. Immunoprecipitation for INO80 and EZH2 followed by western blotting for members of each complex. C. Western blots performed on fractions of glycerol gradient sedimentation in HepG2 cells.
Figure 5Two Distinct Classes of INO80-C Binding Genome-wide. A. Model illustrating the distinguishing characteristics of Canonical INO80 and NC-INO80 binding in HepG2 cells.