Abstract

BackgroundThe Nuclear Factor I (NFI) family of DNA binding proteins (also called CCAAT box transcription factors or CTF) is involved in both DNA replication and gene expression regulation. Using chromatin immuno-precipitation and high throughput sequencing (ChIP-Seq), we performed a genome-wide mapping of NFI DNA binding sites in primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts.ResultsWe found that in vivo and in vitro NFI DNA binding specificities are indistinguishable, as in vivo ChIP-Seq NFI binding sites matched predictions based on previously established position weight matrix models of its in vitro binding specificity. Combining ChIP-Seq with mRNA profiling data, we found that NFI preferentially associates with highly expressed genes that it up-regulates, while binding sites were under-represented at expressed but unregulated genes. Genomic binding also correlated with markers of transcribed genes such as histone modifications H3K4me3 and H3K36me3, even outside of annotated transcribed loci, implying NFI in the control of the deposition of these modifications. Positional correlation between + and - strand ChIP-Seq tags revealed that, in contrast to other transcription factors, NFI associates with a nucleosomal length of cleavage-resistant DNA, suggesting an interaction with positioned nucleosomes. In addition, NFI binding prominently occurred at boundaries displaying discontinuities in histone modifications specific of expressed and silent chromatin, such as loci submitted to parental allele-specific imprinted expression.ConclusionsOur data thus suggest that NFI nucleosomal interaction may contribute to the partitioning of distinct chromatin domains and to epigenetic gene expression regulation.NFI ChIP-Seq and input control DNA data were deposited at Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) repository under accession number GSE15844. Gene expression microarray data for mouse embryonic fibroblasts are on GEO accession number GSE15871.

Highlights

  • The Nuclear Factor I (NFI) family of DNA binding proteins is involved in both DNA replication and gene expression regulation

  • Nuclear factor I (NFI) was initially discovered as a cellular factor required for adenovirus DNA replication [1], where it binds to the origin of replication and recruits the viral DNA polymerase [2,3,4]

  • We found that NFI preferentially associates with highly expressed genes, and that its binding is associated with active chromatin marks, even on binding sites occurring at distance from expressed genes, implying that it may directly control chromatin structure

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Summary

Introduction

The Nuclear Factor I (NFI) family of DNA binding proteins ( called CCAAT box transcription factors or CTF) is involved in both DNA replication and gene expression regulation. All NFI isoforms share a homologous N-terminal domain responsible for the sequence specific DNA binding, while their C-terminal proline-rich regulatory domain differs between variants [18]. This C-terminal domain is required for either the activation or the repression of transcription, and in the case of the NFI-C isoforms, it has been shown to interact with nucleosomal histone H3, in vitro and on reporter promoters in transfected cells [19,20]

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