Abstract

The glucocorticoid receptor (GR, also known as NR3C1) coordinates molecular responses to stress. It is a potent transcription activator and repressor that influences hundreds of genes. Enhancers are non-coding DNA regions outside of the core promoters that increase transcriptional activity via long-distance interactions. Active GR binds to pre-existing enhancer sites and recruits further factors, including EP300, a known transcriptional coactivator. However, it is not known how the timing of GR-binding-induced enhancer remodeling relates to transcriptional changes. Here we analyze data from the ENCODE project that provides ChIP-Seq and RNA-Seq data at distinct time points after dexamethasone exposure of human A549 epithelial-like cell line. This study aimed to investigate the temporal interplay between GR binding, enhancer remodeling, and gene expression. By investigating a single distal GR-binding site for each differentially upregulated gene, we show that transcriptional changes follow GR binding, and that the largest enhancer remodeling coincides in time with the highest gene expression changes. A detailed analysis of the time course showed that for upregulated genes, enhancer activation persists after gene expression changes settle. Moreover, genes with the largest change in EP300 binding showed the highest expression dynamics before the peak of EP300 recruitment. Overall, our results show that enhancer remodeling may not directly be driving gene expression dynamics but rather be a consequence of expression activation.

Highlights

  • Glucocorticoid receptor (GR), encoded by the NR3C1 gene, is a ligand-dependent transcriptional regulator

  • ChiP-Seq experiments allow for high-throughput analysis of chromatin binding, and studies with this method have brought great progress in understanding GR binding to DNA

  • Apart from NR3C1 binding, we focused on markers of enhancer remodeling: EP300, H3K4me1, and H3K27ac

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Summary

Introduction

Glucocorticoid receptor (GR), encoded by the NR3C1 gene, is a ligand-dependent transcriptional regulator. It translocates to the nucleus and interacts with the genome to influence gene expression. GR stimulation activates and represses hundreds of genes [1]. ChiP-Seq experiments allow for high-throughput analysis of chromatin binding, and studies with this method have brought great progress in understanding GR binding to DNA. The specificity of GR binding depends on pre-existing chromatin landscape, with factors, such as accessibility and motifs promoting the binding [4,5,6]. GR frequently binds to enhancers-cis-regulatory elements distal to transcription start site (TSS) of both repressed and activated genes [6,7]

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