Abstract

Transcriptional activators bind DNA and recruit cofactors to modify chromatin. The extent to which these two events are separable is unclear. Here, using a custom ChIP tiling array to map chromatin modifications, we show that interferon-γ-induced DNA binding of signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1), typically associated with the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF1), causes histone acetylation (H3ac, H4ac). In contrast, among IRF1 sites lacking concomitant STAT1 recruitment, only 25% underwent inducible histone acetylation, 31% exhibited constitutive histone acetylation, and 44% had no histone acetylation. These latter "orphan sites" also lacked other activating modifications (e.g. H3K4me1, H3K4me2) and were typically remote from transcription start sites. In these cases the closest gene was typically an IFNγ-inducible locus that did not respond to IFNγ in this setting. Orphan sites were detected in different cell types, suggesting broad relevance. Despite an atypical downstream response (i.e. no histone modifications), IRF1 binding depended on SWI/SNF-related, matrix-associated, actin-dependent regulator of chromatin, subfamily A, member 4 (SMARCA4 or BRG1), as is typical of active IRF1 enhancers. Although SMARCA4 permitted IRF1 access to the orphan sites, there was no corecruitment of the histone acetyltransferases CREB-binding protein (CBP) and p300. Orphan sites were constitutively unacetylated, and several were marked with repressive chromatin modifications (e.g. H3K27me3). In conclusion, although IRF1 can trigger enhanceosome formation independently of STAT1, its ability to do so depends on local chromatin cues.

Highlights

  • Transcriptional activators bind DNA and recruit cofactors to modify chromatin

  • Using a custom ChIP tiling array to map chromatin modifications, we show that interferon-␥-induced DNA binding of signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1), typically associated with the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF1), causes histone acetylation (H3ac, H4ac)

  • STAT1 can recruit HATs [12, 19, 20, 23], and we found that 90% of isolated STAT1 sites were associated with histone acetylation, with most (70%) showing induced H3/4ac and 87% of dual STAT1/IRF1 sites (87%) exhibiting induced histone acetylation (Fig. 3C)

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

ER␣, estrogen receptor ␣; STAT1, signal transducer and activator of transcription 1; IRF1, interferon regulatory factor 1; IFN, interferon; ISG, IFN-stimulated gene; CREB, cAMP-responsive element-binding protein; CBP, CREB-binding protein; qPCR, quantitative PCR; TER, transcription factor enrichment ratio; PRC2, polycomb repressive complex 2. STAT1 and IRF1 is the class II transactivator (CIITA, or MHC2TA), which is the master regulator of major histocompatibility complex class II gene induction [10] This entire cascade of gene induction takes only 5– 6 h and represents an ideal system to study events associated with activator binding. We identified many isolated IFN␥-induced IRF1-binding events that can induce histone acetylation independent of STAT1, but almost half of all such isolated IRF1 sites did not induce histone acetylation or other activating histone modifications. Most of these “orphan sites” were at remote locations, not promoters, but the nearest gene was typically an unresponsive (resistant) ISG. IRF1 can access repressive chromatin, the local environment appears to define its ability to trigger STAT1-independent enhanceosome formation

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