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1.
PLoS Genet ; 17(8): e1009710, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34411103

ABSTRACT

DNA methylation plays crucial roles in transposon silencing and genome integrity. CHROMOMETHYLASE3 (CMT3) is a plant-specific DNA methyltransferase responsible for catalyzing DNA methylation at the CHG (H = A, T, C) context. Here, we identified a positive role of CMT3 in heat-induced activation of retrotransposon ONSEN. We found that the full transcription of ONSEN under heat stress requires CMT3. Interestingly, loss-of-function CMT3 mutation led to increased CHH methylation at ONSEN. The CHH methylation is mediated by CMT2, as evidenced by greatly reduced CHH methylation in cmt2 and cmt2 cmt3 mutants coupled with increased ONSEN transcription. Furthermore, we found more CMT2 binding at ONSEN chromatin in cmt3 compared to wild-type accompanied with an ectopic accumulation of H3K9me2 under heat stress, suggesting a collaborative role of H3K9me2 and CHH methylation in preventing heat-induced ONSEN activation. In summary, this study identifies a non-canonical role of CMT3 in preventing transposon silencing and provides new insights into how DNA methyltransferases regulate transcription under stress conditions.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/physiology , DNA Transposable Elements/ethics , DNA-Cytosine Methylases/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , DNA Methylation , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Gene Silencing , Heat-Shock Response , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Transcription, Genetic
2.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(1): e1008223, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33513136

ABSTRACT

Gene regulatory network inference is essential to uncover complex relationships among gene pathways and inform downstream experiments, ultimately enabling regulatory network re-engineering. Network inference from transcriptional time-series data requires accurate, interpretable, and efficient determination of causal relationships among thousands of genes. Here, we develop Bootstrap Elastic net regression from Time Series (BETS), a statistical framework based on Granger causality for the recovery of a directed gene network from transcriptional time-series data. BETS uses elastic net regression and stability selection from bootstrapped samples to infer causal relationships among genes. BETS is highly parallelized, enabling efficient analysis of large transcriptional data sets. We show competitive accuracy on a community benchmark, the DREAM4 100-gene network inference challenge, where BETS is one of the fastest among methods of similar performance and additionally infers whether causal effects are activating or inhibitory. We apply BETS to transcriptional time-series data of differentially-expressed genes from A549 cells exposed to glucocorticoids over a period of 12 hours. We identify a network of 2768 genes and 31,945 directed edges (FDR ≤ 0.2). We validate inferred causal network edges using two external data sources: Overexpression experiments on the same glucocorticoid system, and genetic variants associated with inferred edges in primary lung tissue in the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) v6 project. BETS is available as an open source software package at https://github.com/lujonathanh/BETS.


Subject(s)
Glucocorticoids/pharmacology , Models, Statistical , Transcriptome/drug effects , A549 Cells , Algorithms , Computational Biology , Humans , Lung/chemistry , Lung/metabolism , Machine Learning , Software , Transcriptome/genetics
3.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 1389: 137-157, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36350509

ABSTRACT

DNA methylation is an important epigenetic mark conserved in eukaryotes from fungi to animals and plants, where it plays a crucial role in regulating gene expression and transposon silencing. Once the methylation mark is established by de novo DNA methyltransferases, specific regulatory mechanisms are required to maintain the methylation state during chromatin replication, both during meiosis and mitosis. Plant DNA methylation is found in three contexts; CG, CHG, and CHH (H = A, T, C), which are established and maintained by a unique set of DNA methyltransferases and are regulated by plant-specific pathways. DNA methylation in plants is often associated with other epigenetic modifications, such as noncoding RNA and histone modifications. This chapter focuses on the structure, function, and regulatory mechanism of plant DNA methyltransferases and their crosstalk with other epigenetic pathways.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis , DNA Methylation , Animals , Methyltransferases/genetics , DNA, Plant/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , DNA Modification Methylases/genetics , Plants/genetics , Plants/metabolism
4.
Genome Res ; 28(9): 1272-1284, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30097539

ABSTRACT

Glucocorticoids are potent steroid hormones that regulate immunity and metabolism by activating the transcription factor (TF) activity of glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Previous models have proposed that DNA binding motifs and sites of chromatin accessibility predetermine GR binding and activity. However, there are vast excesses of both features relative to the number of GR binding sites. Thus, these features alone are unlikely to account for the specificity of GR binding and activity. To identify genomic and epigenetic contributions to GR binding specificity and the downstream changes resultant from GR binding, we performed hundreds of genome-wide measurements of TF binding, epigenetic state, and gene expression across a 12-h time course of glucocorticoid exposure. We found that glucocorticoid treatment induces GR to bind to nearly all pre-established enhancers within minutes. However, GR binds to only a small fraction of the set of accessible sites that lack enhancer marks. Once GR is bound to enhancers, a combination of enhancer motif composition and interactions between enhancers then determines the strength and persistence of GR binding, which consequently correlates with dramatic shifts in enhancer activation. Over the course of several hours, highly coordinated changes in TF binding and histone modification occupancy occur specifically within enhancers, and these changes correlate with changes in the expression of nearby genes. Following GR binding, changes in the binding of other TFs precede changes in chromatin accessibility, suggesting that other TFs are also sensitive to genomic features beyond that of accessibility.


Subject(s)
Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Histone Code , Nucleotide Motifs , Receptors, Glucocorticoid/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation , Cell Line, Tumor , Epigenesis, Genetic , Humans , Protein Binding , Transcription Factors/metabolism
5.
Cell Syst ; 14(7): 549-550, 2023 07 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37473727

ABSTRACT

How ß-catenin, the nuclear activator of the Wnt pathway, affects the chromatin environment of its targets is unknown. Over a time course of stimulation, ß-catenin repositions itself around the genome in a cell-type-specific manner, eliciting transient chromatin changes in differentiated cells and progressive shaping of undifferentiated cells.


Subject(s)
Wnt Proteins , beta Catenin , beta Catenin/genetics , Wnt Proteins/genetics , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway
6.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3877, 2022 07 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35790763

ABSTRACT

DNA methylation is an evolutionarily conserved epigenetic mechanism essential for transposon silencing and heterochromatin assembly. In plants, DNA methylation widely occurs in the CG, CHG, and CHH (H = A, C, or T) contexts, with the maintenance of CHG methylation mediated by CMT3 chromomethylase. However, how CMT3 interacts with the chromatin environment for faithful maintenance of CHG methylation is unclear. Here we report structure-function characterization of the H3K9me2-directed maintenance of CHG methylation by CMT3 and its Zea mays ortholog ZMET2. Base-specific interactions and DNA deformation coordinately underpin the substrate specificity of CMT3 and ZMET2, while a bivalent readout of H3K9me2 and H3K18 allosterically stimulates substrate binding. Disruption of the interaction with DNA or H3K9me2/H3K18 led to loss of CMT3/ZMET2 activity in vitro and impairment of genome-wide CHG methylation in vivo. Together, our study uncovers how the intricate interplay of CMT3, repressive histone marks, and DNA sequence mediates heterochromatic CHG methylation.


Subject(s)
DNA Methylation , Epigenesis, Genetic , DNA Methylation/genetics , Zea mays/genetics , Zea mays/metabolism
7.
Sci Adv ; 7(23)2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34078593

ABSTRACT

DNA methylation is a major epigenetic mechanism critical for gene expression and genome stability. In plants, domains rearranged methyltransferase 2 (DRM2) preferentially mediates CHH (H = C, T, or A) methylation, a substrate specificity distinct from that of mammalian DNA methyltransferases. However, the underlying mechanism is unknown. Here, we report structure-function characterization of DRM2-mediated methylation. An arginine finger from the catalytic loop intercalates into the nontarget strand of DNA through the minor groove, inducing large DNA deformation that affects the substrate preference of DRM2. The target recognition domain stabilizes the enlarged major groove via shape complementarity rather than base-specific interactions, permitting substrate diversity. The engineered DRM2 C397R mutation introduces base-specific contacts with the +2-flanking guanine, thereby shifting the substrate specificity of DRM2 toward CHG DNA. Together, this study uncovers DNA deformation as a mechanism in regulating the specificity of DRM2 toward diverse CHH substrates and illustrates methylome complexity in plants.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Animals , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Archaeal Proteins , DNA/metabolism , DNA Methylation , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Mammals/genetics , Methyltransferases/genetics
8.
Cell Syst ; 7(2): 146-160.e7, 2018 08 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30031775

ABSTRACT

The glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is a hormone-inducible transcription factor involved in metabolic and anti-inflammatory gene expression responses. To investigate what controls interactions between GR binding sites and their target genes, we used in situ Hi-C to generate high-resolution, genome-wide maps of chromatin interactions before and after glucocorticoid treatment. We found that GR binding to the genome typically does not cause new chromatin interactions to target genes but instead acts through chromatin interactions that already exist prior to hormone treatment. Both glucocorticoid-induced and glucocorticoid-repressed genes increased interactions with distal GR binding sites. In addition, while glucocorticoid-induced genes increased interactions with transcriptionally active chromosome compartments, glucocorticoid-repressed genes increased interactions with transcriptionally silent compartments. Lastly, while the architectural DNA-binding proteins CTCF and RAD21 were bound to most chromatin interactions, we found that glucocorticoid-responsive chromatin interactions were depleted for CTCF binding but enriched for RAD21. Together, these findings offer new insights into the mechanisms underlying GC-mediated gene activation and repression.


Subject(s)
Chromatin/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation , Glucocorticoids/metabolism , Receptors, Glucocorticoid/metabolism , Binding Sites , CCCTC-Binding Factor/metabolism , Cell Cycle Proteins , Cell Line , Chromatin/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins , Genome, Human , Humans , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Phosphoproteins/metabolism , Protein Binding
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