Abstract

BackgroundHistone post-translational modifications (PTMs) constitute a branch of epigenetic mechanisms that can control the expression of eukaryotic genes in a heritable manner. Recent studies have identified several PTM-binding proteins containing diverse specialized domains whose recognition of specific PTM sites leads to gene activation or repression. Here, we present a high-throughput proteogenomic platform designed to characterize the nucleosomal make-up of chromatin enriched with a set of histone PTM binding proteins known as histone PTM readers. We support our findings with gene expression data correlating to PTM distribution.ResultsWe isolated human mononucleosomes bound by the bromodomain-containing proteins Brd2, Brd3 and Brd4, and by the chromodomain-containing heterochromatin proteins HP1β and HP1α. Histone PTMs were quantified by mass spectrometry (ChIP-qMS), and their associated DNAs were mapped using deep sequencing. Our results reveal that Brd- and HP1-bound nucleosomes are enriched in histone PTMs consistent with actively transcribed euchromatin and silent heterochromatin, respectively. Data collected using RNA-Seq show that Brd-bound sites correlate with highly expressed genes. In particular, Brd3 and Brd4 are most enriched on nucleosomes located within HOX gene clusters, whose expression is reduced upon Brd4 depletion by short hairpin RNA.ConclusionsProteogenomic mapping of histone PTM readers, alongside the characterization of their local chromatin environments and transcriptional information, should prove useful for determining how histone PTMs are bound by these readers and how they contribute to distinct transcriptional states.

Highlights

  • Histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) constitute a branch of epigenetic mechanisms that can control the expression of eukaryotic genes in a heritable manner

  • The ‘histone code’ hypothesis proposes that specific histone PTMs encode regulatory information that is read by the binding of accessory proteins

  • The immunoprecipitated histones were derivatized with propionic anhydride, trypsinized, and subjected to quantitative mass spectrometry (qMS) via nano scale liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry experiments on an Orbitrap instrument [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) constitute a branch of epigenetic mechanisms that can control the expression of eukaryotic genes in a heritable manner. Recent studies have identified several PTMbinding proteins containing diverse specialized domains whose recognition of specific PTM sites leads to gene activation or repression. The ‘histone code’ hypothesis proposes that specific histone PTMs encode regulatory information that is read by the binding of accessory proteins. These accessory proteins, termed ‘readers’, bind via specialized histone-PTMbinding domains such as bromodomains, chromodomains and plant homeodomains (PHDs) [1]. Recent publications have reported two Brd protein selective small molecule inhibitors (I-BET and JQ-1) that inhibit bromodomain binding to acetylated histones, thereby blocking a lipopolysaccharideinduced cytokine storm and the growth of Brd-dependent tumors [9,11]

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