9,633 research outputs found

    Regulation of transcription by the Arabidopsis UVR8 photoreceptor involves a specific histone modification

    Get PDF
    The photoreceptor UV RESISTANCE LOCUS 8 (UVR8) specifically mediates photomorphogenic responses to UV-B wavelengths. UVR8 acts by regulating transcription of a set of genes, but the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Previous research indicated that UVR8 can associate with chromatin, but the specificity and functional significance of this interaction are not clear. Here we show, by chromatin immunoprecipitation, that UV-B exposure of Arabidopsis increases acetylation of lysines K9 and/or K14 of histone H3 at UVR8-regulated gene loci in a UVR8-dependent manner. The transcription factors HY5 and/or HYH, which mediate UVR8-regulated transcription, are also required for this chromatin modification, at least for the ELIP1 gene. Furthermore, sequencing of the immunoprecipitated DNA revealed that all UV-B-induced enrichments in H3K9,14diacetylation across the genome are UVR8-dependent, and approximately 40 % of the enriched loci contain known UVR8-regulated genes. In addition, inhibition of histone acetylation by anacardic acid reduces the UV-B induced, UVR8 mediated expression of ELIP1 and CHS. No evidence was obtained in yeast 2-hybrid assays for a direct interaction between either UVR8 or HY5 and several proteins involved in light-regulated histone modification, nor for the involvement of these proteins in UVR8-mediated responses in plants, although functional redundancy between proteins could influence the results. In summary, this study shows that UVR8 regulates a specific chromatin modification associated with transcriptional regulation of a set of UVR8-target genes

    Genome-wide prediction of transcription factor binding sites using an integrated model

    Get PDF
    A new approach for genome-wide transcription factor binding site prediction is presented that integrates sequence and chromatin modification data

    The Role of Chromatin Modification in Germ Cell Specification and Development

    Get PDF
    Chromatin modifications are modifications of nuclear proteins called histones. Histones are important for the compaction of DNA. These chromatin modifications can result in activation or repression of transcription of the DNA, which is essential for the cell to synthesize proteins and pass on genetic information. Some chromatin modifications have been linked to fertility and specification of reproductive cells called germ cells. We are studying a chromatin modification that has not been previously identified in germ cells. The mechanism and enzyme involved in this reproductive cell chromatin modification is not well understood. My research has been focused on identifying the enzyme that regulates this modification. The hypothesis it that this modification will affect reproductive cells specification and fertility. I use C. elegans, a eukaryotic nematode, as the model organism. This nematode is optimal because it is easy and fast to culture, allowing for variant strains to be produced. C. elegans is also transparent, so specific cells can be tracked and cell lineages can be followed. We found a specific chromatin modification that is prominent in late embryo germ cells of the wild type C.elegans. I have been researching if mutant worm strains, some with fertility defects, still present the chromatin modification in germ cells. Currently, I have found that two out of four mutants have less of this modification present in their germ cells. Further studies are ongoing to observe any changes in this modification in other mutant worm strains. Since C. elegans shares similar biological regulation mechanisms as humans do, results from this study can contribute to a better understanding of the mechanism in the development of germ cells in humans. The results can be applied to many biomedical implications by being able to manipulate these regulations for our benefit in development and disease

    Rapid, solid-phase based automated analysis of chromatin structure and transcription factor occupancy in living eukaryotic cells

    Get PDF
    Transcription factors, chromatin components and chromatin modification activities are involved in many diseases including cancer. However, the means by which alterations in these factors influence the epigenotype of specific cell types is poorly understood. One problem that limits progress is that regulatory regions of eukaryotic genes sometimes extend over large regions of DNA. To improve chromatin structure–function analysis over such large regions, we have developed an automated, relatively simple procedure that uses magnetic beads and a capillary sequencer for ligation-mediated-PCR (LM-PCR). We show that the procedure can be used for the rapid examination of chromatin fine-structure, nucleosome positioning as well as changes in transcription factor binding-site occupancy during cellular differentiation

    Nucleosome-mediated cooperativity between transcription factors

    Get PDF
    Cooperative binding of transcription factors (TFs) to cis-regulatory regions (CRRs) is essential for precision of gene expression in development and other processes. The classical model of cooperativity requires direct interactions between TFs, thus constraining the arrangement of TFs sites in a CRR. On the contrary, genomic and functional studies demonstrate a great deal of flexibility in such arrangements with variable distances, numbers of sites, and identities of the involved TFs. Such flexibility is inconsistent with the cooperativity by direct interactions between TFs. Here we demonstrate that strong cooperativity among non-interacting TFs can be achieved by their competition with nucleosomes. We find that the mechanism of nucleosome-mediated cooperativity is mathematically identical to the Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) model of cooperativity in hemoglobin. This surprising parallel provides deep insights, with parallels between heterotropic regulation of hemoglobin (e.g. Bohr effect) and roles of nucleosome-positioning sequences and chromatin modifications in gene regulation. Characterized mechanism is consistent with numerous experimental results, allows substantial flexibility in and modularity of CRRs, and provides a rationale for a broad range of genomic and evolutionary observations. Striking parallels between cooperativity in hemoglobin and in transcription regulation point at a new design principle that may be used in range of biological systems

    ChromHMM: automating chromatin-state discovery and characterization

    Get PDF
    To the Editor: Chromatin-state annotation using combinations of chromatin modification patterns has emerged as a powerful approach for discovering regulatory regions and their cell type–specific activity patterns and for interpreting disease-association studies1, 2, 3, 4, 5. However, the computational challenge of learning chromatin-state models from large numbers of chromatin modification datasets in multiple cell types still requires extensive bioinformatics expertise. To address this challenge, we developed ChromHMM, an automated computational system for learning chromatin states, characterizing their biological functions and correlations with large-scale functional datasets and visualizing the resulting genome-wide maps of chromatin-state annotations.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computational and Systems Biology InitiativeNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (postdoctoral fellowship 0905968)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (1-RC1- HG005334)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (1 U54 HG004570

    An Integrated Approach to Identifying Cis-Regulatory Modules in the Human Genome

    Get PDF
    In eukaryotic genomes, it is challenging to accurately determine target sites of transcription factors (TFs) by only using sequence information. Previous efforts were made to tackle this task by considering the fact that TF binding sites tend to be more conserved than other functional sites and the binding sites of several TFs are often clustered. Recently, ChIP-chip and ChIP-sequencing experiments have been accumulated to identify TF binding sites as well as survey the chromatin modification patterns at the regulatory elements such as promoters and enhancers. We propose here a hidden Markov model (HMM) to incorporate sequence motif information, TF-DNA interaction data and chromatin modification patterns to precisely identify cis-regulatory modules (CRMs). We conducted ChIP-chip experiments on four TFs, CREB, E2F1, MAX, and YY1 in 1% of the human genome. We then trained a hidden Markov model (HMM) to identify the labels of the CRMs by incorporating the sequence motifs recognized by these TFs and the ChIP-chip ratio. Chromatin modification data was used to predict the functional sites and to further remove false positives. Cross-validation showed that our integrated HMM had a performance superior to other existing methods on predicting CRMs. Incorporating histone signature information successfully penalized false prediction and improved the whole performance. The dataset we used and the software are available at http://nash.ucsd.edu/CIS/

    Alteration of Epigenetic Regulation by Long Noncoding RNAs in Cancer

    Get PDF
    Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are important regulators of the epigenetic status of the human genome. Besides their participation to normal physiology, lncRNA expression and function have been already associated to many diseases, including cancer. By interacting with epigenetic regulators and by controlling chromatin topology, their misregulation may result in an aberrant regulation of gene expression that may contribute to tumorigenesis. Here, we review the functional role and mechanisms of action of lncRNAs implicated in the aberrant epigenetic regulation that has characterized cancer development and progression

    CRISPR-Cas9 screens in human cells and primary neurons identify modifiers of C9ORF72 dipeptide-repeat-protein toxicity.

    Get PDF
    Hexanucleotide-repeat expansions in the C9ORF72 gene are the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (c9ALS/FTD). The nucleotide-repeat expansions are translated into dipeptide-repeat (DPR) proteins, which are aggregation prone and may contribute to neurodegeneration. We used the CRISPR-Cas9 system to perform genome-wide gene-knockout screens for suppressors and enhancers of C9ORF72 DPR toxicity in human cells. We validated hits by performing secondary CRISPR-Cas9 screens in primary mouse neurons. We uncovered potent modifiers of DPR toxicity whose gene products function in nucleocytoplasmic transport, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), proteasome, RNA-processing pathways, and chromatin modification. One modifier, TMX2, modulated the ER-stress signature elicited by C9ORF72 DPRs in neurons and improved survival of human induced motor neurons from patients with C9ORF72 ALS. Together, our results demonstrate the promise of CRISPR-Cas9 screens in defining mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases
    • …
    corecore