Abstract
Covalent histone modifications are highly conserved and play multiple roles in eukaryotic transcription regulation. Here, we mapped 26 histone modifications genome-wide in exponentially growing yeast and during a dramatic transcriptional reprogramming-the response to diamide stress. We extend prior studies showing that steady-state histone modification patterns reflect genomic processes, especially transcription, and display limited combinatorial complexity. Interestingly, during the stress response we document a modest increase in the combinatorial complexity of histone modification space, resulting from roughly 3% of all nucleosomes transiently populating rare histone modification states. Most of these rare histone states result from differences in the kinetics of histone modification that transiently uncouple highly correlated marks, with slow histone methylation changes often lagging behind the more rapid acetylation changes. Explicit analysis of modification dynamics uncovers ordered sequences of events in gene activation and repression. Together, our results provide a comprehensive view of chromatin dynamics during a massive transcriptional upheaval.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 371-386 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Molecular Cell |
Volume | 58 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 16 Apr 2015 |
Funding
We thank T. Fazzio, M. Garber, P. Kaufman, T. Kaplan, R. Sadeh, A. Tresch, and members of the Rando and Friedman labs for comments on this manuscript. We thank A. Hughes for help with TSS mapping measurements. Work was supported in part by the NIGMS grant GM079205 to O.J.R. and N.F., NHGRI Center for Excellence in Genome Science (1P50HG006193) to I.A., ERC grants 340712 to N.F. and 309788 to I.A., ISF Center Grant 1796/12 to N.F., ISF Grant 1782/11 to I.A., and ISF I-CORE grant on “Chromatin and RNA in Gene Regulation” to N.F. and I.A. Author contributions - A.W., T.-H.S.H., H.V.C., O.J.R., and N.F. conceived and designed this study. T.-H.S.H. and H.V.C. conducted the ChIP experiments. A.W., with support from A.R., A.A., and I.A., performed library construction and sequencing. A.W., A.A., and N.F. designed the computational methods. A.A. and A.W. developed and implemented these methods. A.W., A.A., O.J.R., and N.F. performed data analysis. O.J.R., N.F., A.W., and A.A. wrote the manuscript with contributions from all authors.
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Molecular Biology
- Cell Biology