Self-organization of whole-gene expression through coordinated chromatin structural transition

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 031303
Author(s):  
Giovanna Zimatore ◽  
Masa Tsuchiya ◽  
Midori Hashimoto ◽  
Andrzej Kasperski ◽  
Alessandro Giuliani
2011 ◽  
Vol 109 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Franklin ◽  
Haodong Chen ◽  
Scherise Mitchell-Jordan ◽  
Shuxun Ren ◽  
Peipei Ping ◽  
...  

Nuclear DNA is packaged around the octameric nucleosome core particle, constituting the basic building block of chromatin. Non-nucleosome chromatin structural molecules have been shown to induce higher order packaging of DNA into structurally compact and inactive heterochromatin, or loosely packed and active euchromatin. These chromatin remodeling events are thought to establish a cell type specific pattern of gene expression. During the development of cardiac hypertrophy and failure, genes normally only expressed during development are re-activated. While a number of transcription factors involved in these changes in fetal gene expression have been identified, the means for genome-wide structural remodeling of DNA are unknown. To identify factors controlling genomic plasticity in cardiomyocytes, we used mass spectrometry to quantify chromatin-associated proteins from cardiac nuclei during stages of hypertrophy and failure in the mouse. Adult mice were subjected to cardiac pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction. Chromatin was fractionated from cardiac nuclei and DNA-bound proteins were acid extracted and analyzed by mass spectrometry. We measured chromatin occupancy patterns for >300 proteins during distinct stages of heart failure. To explore the isoform specific roles of individual chromatin structural proteins, we used siRNA to knock-down expression of two high mobility group proteins (HMGB1 and 2) exhibiting altered expression in the hypertrophic heart. Loss of HMGB2 (but not HMGB1) induced robust hypertrophic growth in cardiomyocytes. qRT-PCR analyses demonstrated that HMGB2 is responsible for some but not all changes in the fetal gene program (ANF increased 150% and SERCA decreased 20%, whereas α- and β-MHC were unchanged). To further explore the endogenous regions of the genome under control of HMGB2 packing, we performed microarrays following HMGB2 knockdown. Hypertrophy or HMGB2 knock-down induced global chromatin remodeling conducive to gene expression, as measured by histone post-translational modifications and the ratio of core to linker histones. These studies reveal a novel role of HMGB2 to inhibit hypertrophic growth and provide insights into general principles for genome-wide chromatin remodeling.


mBio ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hervé Leh ◽  
Ahmad Khodr ◽  
Marie-Christine Bouger ◽  
Bianca Sclavi ◽  
Sylvie Rimsky ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT In enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) encodes a type 3 secretion system (T3SS) essential for pathogenesis. This pathogenicity island comprises five major operons (LEE1 to LEE5), with the LEE5 operon encoding T3SS effectors involved in the intimate adherence of bacteria to enterocytes. The first operon, LEE1, encodes Ler (LEE-encoded regulator), an H-NS (nucleoid structuring protein) paralog that alleviates the LEE H-NS silencing. We observed that the LEE5 and LEE1 promoters present a bimodal expression pattern, depending on environmental stimuli. One key regulator of bimodal LEE1 and LEE5 expression is ler expression, which fluctuates in response to different growth conditions. Under conditions in vitro considered to be equivalent to nonoptimal conditions for virulence, the opposing regulatory effects of H-NS and Ler can lead to the emergence of two bacterial subpopulations. H-NS and Ler share nucleation binding sites in the LEE5 promoter region, but H-NS binding results in local DNA structural modifications distinct from those generated through Ler binding, at least in vitro. Thus, we show how two nucleoid-binding proteins can contribute to the epigenetic regulation of bacterial virulence and lead to opposing bacterial fates. This finding implicates for the first time bacterial-chromatin structural proteins in the bimodal regulation of gene expression. IMPORTANCE Gene expression stochasticity is an emerging phenomenon in microbiology. In certain contexts, gene expression stochasticity can shape bacterial epigenetic regulation. In enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), the interplay between H-NS (a nucleoid structuring protein) and Ler (an H-NS paralog) is required for bimodal LEE5 and LEE1 expression, leading to the emergence of two bacterial subpopulations (with low and high states of expression). The two proteins share mutual nucleation binding sites in the LEE5 promoter region. In vitro, the binding of H-NS to the LEE5 promoter results in local structural modifications of DNA distinct from those generated through Ler binding. Furthermore, ler expression is a key parameter modulating the variability of the proportions of bacterial subpopulations. Accordingly, modulating the production of Ler into a nonpathogenic E. coli strain reproduces the bimodal expression of LEE5. Finally, this study illustrates how two nucleoid-binding proteins can reshape the epigenetic regulation of bacterial virulence. IMPORTANCE Gene expression stochasticity is an emerging phenomenon in microbiology. In certain contexts, gene expression stochasticity can shape bacterial epigenetic regulation. In enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), the interplay between H-NS (a nucleoid structuring protein) and Ler (an H-NS paralog) is required for bimodal LEE5 and LEE1 expression, leading to the emergence of two bacterial subpopulations (with low and high states of expression). The two proteins share mutual nucleation binding sites in the LEE5 promoter region. In vitro, the binding of H-NS to the LEE5 promoter results in local structural modifications of DNA distinct from those generated through Ler binding. Furthermore, ler expression is a key parameter modulating the variability of the proportions of bacterial subpopulations. Accordingly, modulating the production of Ler into a nonpathogenic E. coli strain reproduces the bimodal expression of LEE5. Finally, this study illustrates how two nucleoid-binding proteins can reshape the epigenetic regulation of bacterial virulence.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian S. James ◽  
Leah A. Krubitzer ◽  
Stuart P. Wilson

AbstractBrain development relies on an interplay between genetic specification and self-organization. Striking examples of this relationship can be found in the somatosensory brainstem, thalamus, and cortex of rats and mice, where the arrangement of the facial whiskers is preserved in the arrangement of cell aggregates to form precise somatotopic maps. We show in simulation how realistic whisker maps can self-organize, by assuming that information is exchanged between adjacent cells only, under the guidance of gene expression gradients. The resulting model provides a simple account of how patterns of gene expression can constrain spontaneous pattern formation to faithfully reproduce functional maps in subsequent brain structures.


2012 ◽  
Vol 111 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Franklin ◽  
Haodong Chen ◽  
Elaheh Karbassi ◽  
Emma Monte ◽  
Thomas M Vondriska

Except during metaphase, endogenous chromatin structure is unknown. DNA - invariant between cells - and the cell type-specific modifiers of the genome establish chromatin structural features, both local (e.g. at the scale of individual nucleosomes) and global (e.g. chromosomal territories). A fundamental question is how these cell type-specific modifiers, including DNA modification, non-coding RNAs, and proteins, establish the chromatin environment conducive to gene expression for the correct cell type: in cardiac muscle, how is the genome structurally poised to confer cardiac (and not, say, renal) transcriptomes and proteomes, and what physical reprogramming events occur during disease? To address these questions, we are conducting a systems analysis of the epigenetic features of the healthy and diseased heart. In adult mice, we have used quantitative mass spectrometry to dissect distinct fractions of the nucleus and reveal the itineraries of chromatin structural proteins, enzymatic nucleosome remodelers, histone molecules and histone post-translational modifications. These studies have revealed rules for global reprogramming of gene expression, which involve altered abundance of non-histone chromatin structural proteins, a shift from hetero- towards euchromatic post-translational marks and a decreased linker to core histone ratio in heart failure. Furthermore, interrogation of genome-wide binding patterns of known cardiac transcription factors within the genes that encode proteins operative in cardiac genomic structure reveals hierarchical relationships between these protein, transcript and gene networks. Complementary investigations in isolated myocytes are characterizing the global rearrangement of chromatin following hypertrophic agonist treatment using conventional and super-resolution microscopy to directly visualize the chromatin backbone. Lastly, a combination of multiple genomic scale sequencing studies have revealed regions under control of specific chromatin structural proteins. Together, these studies aim to address the basic question of how global chromatin structure is maintained in cardiac myocytes and how diseases like heart failure result from deranged chromatin structure on a genomic scale.


eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian S James ◽  
Leah A Krubitzer ◽  
Stuart P Wilson

Brain development relies on an interplay between genetic specification and self-organization. Striking examples of this relationship can be found in the somatosensory brainstem, thalamus, and cortex of rats and mice, where the arrangement of the facial whiskers is preserved in the arrangement of cell aggregates to form precise somatotopic maps. We show in simulation how realistic whisker maps can self-organize, by assuming that information is exchanged between adjacent cells only, under the guidance of gene expression gradients. The resulting model provides a simple account of how patterns of gene expression can constrain spontaneous pattern formation to faithfully reproduce functional maps in subsequent brain structures.


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