» Articles » PMID: 34850108

Assessing Genome-wide Dynamic Changes in Enhancer Activity During Early MESC Differentiation by FAIRE-STARR-seq

Overview
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2021 Dec 1
PMID 34850108
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) can differentiate into any given cell type and therefore represent a versatile model to study the link between gene regulation and differentiation. To quantitatively assess the dynamics of enhancer activity during the early stages of murine ESC differentiation, we analyzed accessible genomic regions using STARR-seq, a massively parallel reporter assay. This resulted in a genome-wide quantitative map of active mESC enhancers, in pluripotency and during the early stages of differentiation. We find that only a minority of accessible regions is active and that such regions are enriched near promoters, characterized by specific chromatin marks, enriched for distinct sequence motifs, and modeling shows that active regions can be predicted from sequence alone. Regions that change their activity upon retinoic acid-induced differentiation are more prevalent at distal intergenic regions when compared to constitutively active enhancers. Further, analysis of differentially active enhancers verified the contribution of individual TF motifs toward activity and inducibility as well as their role in regulating endogenous genes. Notably, the activity of retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARα) occupied regions can either increase or decrease upon the addition of its ligand, retinoic acid, with the direction of the change correlating with spacing and orientation of the RARα consensus motif and the co-occurrence of additional sequence motifs. Together, our genome-wide enhancer activity map elucidates features associated with enhancer activity levels, identifies regulatory regions disregarded by computational prediction tools, and provides a resource for future studies into regulatory elements in mESCs.

Citing Articles

A Mesenchymal stem cell Aging Framework, from Mechanisms to Strategies.

Zhao H, Zhao H, Ji S Stem Cell Rev Rep. 2024; 20(6):1420-1440.

PMID: 38727878 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-024-10732-4.


Systematic mapping and modeling of 3D enhancer-promoter interactions in early mouse embryonic lineages reveal regulatory principles that determine the levels and cell-type specificity of gene expression.

Murphy D, Salataj E, Di Giammartino D, Rodriguez-Hernaez J, Kloetgen A, Garg V bioRxiv. 2023; .

PMID: 37577543 PMC: 10422694. DOI: 10.1101/2023.07.19.549714.


RNA polymerase II dynamics shape enhancer-promoter interactions.

Barshad G, Lewis J, Chivu A, Abuhashem A, Krietenstein N, Rice E Nat Genet. 2023; 55(8):1370-1380.

PMID: 37430091 PMC: 10714922. DOI: 10.1038/s41588-023-01442-7.


Emerging insights into enhancer biology and function.

Arnold M, Stengel K Transcription. 2023; 14(1-2):68-87.

PMID: 37312570 PMC: 10353330. DOI: 10.1080/21541264.2023.2222032.


Challenges and considerations for reproducibility of STARR-seq assays.

Das M, Hossain A, Banerjee D, Praul C, Girirajan S Genome Res. 2023; 33(4):479-495.

PMID: 37130797 PMC: 10234304. DOI: 10.1101/gr.277204.122.

References
1.
Yang S, Andrabi M, Biss R, Baker S, Iqbal M, Sharrocks A . ZIC3 Controls the Transition from Naive to Primed Pluripotency. Cell Rep. 2019; 27(11):3215-3227.e6. PMC: 6581693. DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.05.026. View

2.
Chambers I, Tomlinson S . The transcriptional foundation of pluripotency. Development. 2009; 136(14):2311-22. PMC: 2729344. DOI: 10.1242/dev.024398. View

3.
Mumbach M, Rubin A, Flynn R, Dai C, Khavari P, Greenleaf W . HiChIP: efficient and sensitive analysis of protein-directed genome architecture. Nat Methods. 2016; 13(11):919-922. PMC: 5501173. DOI: 10.1038/nmeth.3999. View

4.
Klann T, Black J, Chellappan M, Safi A, Song L, Hilton I . CRISPR-Cas9 epigenome editing enables high-throughput screening for functional regulatory elements in the human genome. Nat Biotechnol. 2017; 35(6):561-568. PMC: 5462860. DOI: 10.1038/nbt.3853. View

5.
Armache A, Yang S, Martinez de Paz A, Robbins L, Durmaz C, Cheong J . Histone H3.3 phosphorylation amplifies stimulation-induced transcription. Nature. 2020; 583(7818):852-857. PMC: 7517595. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2533-0. View