HiCuT: An efficient and low input method to identify protein-directed chromatin interactions

被引:12
|
作者
Sati, Satish [1 ]
Jones, Parker [1 ]
Kim, Hali S. [1 ]
Zhou, Linda A. [2 ]
Rapp-Reyes, Emmanuel [1 ]
Leung, Thomas H. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Dept Dermatol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Dept Genet, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Corporal Michael J Crescenz Dept Vet Affairs Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
来源
PLOS GENETICS | 2022年 / 18卷 / 03期
关键词
P53; HOMOLOG; GENOME; PROVIDES; DOMAINS; SYSTEM; P63;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pgen.1010121
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
3D genome organization regulates gene expression, and disruption of these long-range (>20kB) DNA-protein interactions results in pathogenic phenotypes. Chromosome conformation methods in conjunction with chromatin immunoprecipitation were used to decipher protein-directed chromatin interactions. However, these methods required abundant starting material (>500,000 cells), sizable number of sequencing reads (>100 million reads), and elaborate data processing methods to reduce background noise, which limited their use in primary cells. Hi-C Coupled chromatin cleavage and Tagmentation (HiCuT) is a new transposase-assisted tagmentation method that generates high-resolution protein directed long-range chromatin interactions as efficiently as existing methods, HiChIP and ChIA-PET, despite using 100,000 cells (5-fold less) and 12 million sequencing reads (8-fold fewer). Moreover, HiCuT generates high resolution fragment libraries with low background signal that are easily interpreted with minimal computational processing. We used HiCuT in human primary skin cells to link previously identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in skin disease to candidate genes and to identify functionally relevant transcription factors in an unbiased manner. HiCuT broadens the capacity for genomic profiling in systems previously unmeasurable, including primary cells, human tissue samples, and rare cell populations, and may be a useful tool for all investigators studying human genetics and personalized epigenomics. Author summaryDNA is precisely packaged and organized within a nucleus to regulate gene expression. Altering this structure results in disease and developmental abnormalities. Current methods to probe 3D genome organization require a minimum of 500,000 cells, 100 million sequencing reads, and elaborate computational genomics skills. This limits general adoption and prevents use in small populations of cells, including primary tissues. We report a new method called Hi-C Coupled chromatin cleavage and Tagmentation (HiCuT). This method couples current 3D genome methods in conjunction with target specific tagmentation, an enzyme-assisted approach to cut and tag DNA. We benchmarked HiCuT against existing methods and found similar efficiency and specificity in assessing target specific 3D genome organization despite reducing assay requirements to 100,000 cells (5-fold less) and 12 million sequencing reads (8-fold fewer). Strikingly, HiCuT data exhibited reduced background noise and required minimal computational processing. Taken together, HiCuT broadens the capacity for 3D genome profiling in cell populations previously unmeasurable, including primary cells and human tissues, reduces sequencing costs, and lowers the need for computational expertise. HiCuT will benefit all investigators studying gene regulation and disease pathophysiology.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] HiCuT: An efficient and low input method to identify protein-centric chromatin interactions
    Sati, S.
    Jones, P.
    Kim, H. S.
    Zhou, L. A.
    Rapp-Reyes, E.
    Leung, T. H.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2022, 142 (08) : B23 - B23
  • [2] HiChIP: efficient and sensitive analysis of protein-directed genome architecture
    Maxwell R Mumbach
    Adam J Rubin
    Ryan A Flynn
    Chao Dai
    Paul A Khavari
    William J Greenleaf
    Howard Y Chang
    Nature Methods, 2016, 13 : 919 - 922
  • [3] HiChIP: efficient and sensitive analysis of protein-directed genome architecture
    Mumbach, Maxwell R.
    Rubin, Adam J.
    Flynn, Ryan A.
    Dai, Chao
    Khavari, Paul A.
    Greenleaf, William J.
    Chang, Howard Y.
    NATURE METHODS, 2016, 13 (11) : 919 - +
  • [4] Protein-Directed Dynamic Combinatorial Chemistry: An Efficient Strategy in Drug Design
    Canal-Martin, Andrea
    Perez-Fernandez, Ruth
    ACS OMEGA, 2020, 5 (41): : 26307 - 26315
  • [5] Hi-Tag: a simple and efficient method for identifying protein-mediated long-range chromatin interactions with low cell numbers
    Qi, Xiaolong
    Zhang, Lu
    Zhao, Qiulin
    Zhou, Peng
    Zhang, Saixian
    Li, Jingjin
    Zheng, Zhuqing
    Xiang, Yue
    Dai, Xueting
    Jin, Zhe
    Jian, Yaobang
    Li, Xinyun
    Fu, Liangliang
    Zhao, Shuhong
    SCIENCE CHINA-LIFE SCIENCES, 2024, 67 (05) : 1027 - 1034
  • [6] Hi-Tag: a simple and efficient method for identifying protein-mediated long-range chromatin interactions with low cell numbers
    Xiaolong Qi
    Lu Zhang
    Qiulin Zhao
    Peng Zhou
    Sai Xian Zhang
    Jingjin Li
    Zhuqing Zheng
    Yue Xiang
    Xueting Dai
    Zhe Jin
    Yaobang Jian
    Xinyun Li
    Liangliang Fu
    Shuhong Zhao
    Science China(Life Sciences), 2024, 67 (05) : 1027 - 1034
  • [7] Hi-Tag: a simple and efficient method for identifying protein-mediated long-range chromatin interactions with low cell numbers
    Xiaolong Qi
    Lu Zhang
    Qiulin Zhao
    Peng Zhou
    SaiXian Zhang
    Jingjin Li
    Zhuqing Zheng
    Yue Xiang
    Xueting Dai
    Zhe Jin
    Yaobang Jian
    Xinyun Li
    Liangliang Fu
    Shuhong Zhao
    Science China Life Sciences, 2024, 67 : 1027 - 1034
  • [8] Protein-directed synthesis of Bi2S3 nanoparticles as an efficient contrast agent for visualizing the gastrointestinal tract
    Zu, Yan
    Yong, Yuan
    Zhang, Xiao
    Yu, Jie
    Dong, Xinghua
    Yin, Wenyan
    Yan, Liang
    Zhao, Feng
    Gu, Zhanjun
    Zhao, Yuliang
    RSC ADVANCES, 2017, 7 (28): : 17505 - 17513
  • [9] A METHOD FOR DETECTING PROTEIN DNA INTERACTIONS AT SITES OF CHROMATIN REPLICATION
    BLANCO, J
    KIMURA, H
    MUELLER, GC
    ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY, 1987, 163 (02) : 537 - 545
  • [10] An efficient docking method to study protein interactions
    Duan, YH
    Reddy, B
    Breslauer, D
    Kaznessis, Y
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 86 (01) : 267A - 267A