Genome-wide relationship between histone H3 lysine 4 mono- and tri-methylation and transcription factor binding

  1. A. Gordon Robertson1,4,
  2. Mikhail Bilenky1,4,
  3. Angela Tam1,
  4. Yongjun Zhao1,
  5. Thomas Zeng1,
  6. Nina Thiessen1,
  7. Timothee Cezard1,
  8. Anthony P. Fejes1,
  9. Elizabeth D. Wederell2,
  10. Rebecca Cullum2,
  11. Ghia Euskirchen3,
  12. Martin Krzywinski1,
  13. Inanc Birol1,
  14. Michael Snyder3,
  15. Pamela A. Hoodless2,
  16. Martin Hirst1,
  17. Marco A. Marra1, and
  18. Steven J.M. Jones1,5
  1. 1 BC Cancer Agency Genome Sciences Centre, Vancouver V5Z 4S6, Canada;
  2. 2 Terry Fox Laboratory, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver V5Z 1L3, Canada;
  3. 3 Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA
  1. 4 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

We characterized the relationship of H3K4me1 and H3K4me3 at distal and proximal regulatory elements by comparing ChIP-seq profiles for these histone modifications and for two functionally different transcription factors: STAT1 in the immortalized HeLa S3 cell line, with and without interferon-gamma (IFNG) stimulation; and FOXA2 in mouse adult liver tissue. In unstimulated and stimulated HeLa cells, respectively, we determined ∼270,000 and ∼301,000 H3K4me1-enriched regions, and ∼54,500 and ∼76,100 H3K4me3-enriched regions. In mouse adult liver, we determined ∼227,000 and ∼34,800 H3K4me1 and H3K4me3 regions. Seventy-five percent of the ∼70,300 STAT1 binding sites in stimulated HeLa cells and 87% of the ∼11,000 FOXA2 sites in mouse liver were distal to known gene TSS; in both cell types, ∼83% of these distal sites were associated with at least one of the two histone modifications, and H3K4me1 was associated with over 96% of marked distal sites. After filtering against predicted transcription start sites, 50% of ∼26,800 marked distal IFNG-stimulated STAT1 binding sites, but 95% of ∼5800 marked distal FOXA2 sites, were associated with H3K4me1 only. Results for HeLa cells generated additional insights into transcriptional regulation involving STAT1. STAT1 binding was associated with 25% of all H3K4me1 regions in stimulated HeLa cells, suggesting that a single transcription factor can interact with an unexpectedly large fraction of regulatory regions. Strikingly, for a large majority of the locations of stimulated STAT1 binding, the dominant H3K4me1/me3 combinations were established before activation, suggesting mechanisms independent of IFNG stimulation and high-affinity STAT1 binding.

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