Abstract

The presence of H3K27me3 has been demonstrated to correlate with the CpG content. In this work, we tested whether H3K27ac has similar sequence preferences. We performed a translocation of DNA sequences with various properties into a beta globin locus to control for the local chromatin environment. We demonstrate that H3K27ac is not linked to CpG content of the sequence, while extremely high GC-content may contribute to the establishment of this mark.

Highlights

  • Histone modification is a key mechanism of epigenetic regulation

  • Ligation product was transformed into E. coli Top-10 cells, one of the clones was chosen and the insert was confirmed by Sanger sequencing

  • None of the GC- and CpG rich promoter regions, that were acetylated in their original genomic loci recovered H3K27ac after relocation to a foreign genomic context in the beta globin locus, suggesting that H3K27ac may not depend directly on such features

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Summary

Introduction

Histone modification is a key mechanism of epigenetic regulation. Histone modification varies between cells in some genomic locations but not others. This observation raises the question to what extent histone modifications depend on the underlying nucleotide sequences. It has been reported that the attraction of PRC2 complex and consequent H3K27me[3] is correlated with the local density of CpG dinucleotides[1]. More complex sequence patterns, such as transcription factor (TF) binding sites (TFBS), affect the presence of histone modifications; SUZ12, a member of the PRC2 complex, binds DNA in a sequence-specific manner; NRCF and ZBTB33 recruit histone deacetylase. The ENCODE project demonstrated a specific histone modification profile around binding sites of many TFs2

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