Bacterial infection remodels the DNA methylation landscape of human dendritic cells
- Alain Pacis1,
- Ludovic Tailleux2,
- Alexander M Morin3,
- John Lambourne4,
- Julia L Maclsaac3,
- Vania Yotova5,
- Anne Dumaine5,
- Anne Danckaert2,
- Francesca Luca6,
- Jean-Christophe Grenier5,
- Kasper D Hansen7,
- Brigitte Gicquel2,
- Miao Yu8,
- Athma Pai9,
- Chuan He8,
- Jenny Tung10,
- Tomi Pastinen4,
- Michael S Kobor3,
- Roger Pique-Regi6,
- Yoav Gilad8 and
- Luis B Barreiro1,11
- 1 University of Montreal;
- 2 Pasteur Institute;
- 3 University of British Columbia;
- 4 McGill University;
- 5 CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center;
- 6 Wayne State University;
- 7 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health;
- 8 University of Chicago;
- 9 Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
- 10 Duke University
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: luis.barreiro{at}umontreal.ca
Abstract
DNA methylation is an epigenetic mark thought to be robust to environmental perturbations on a short time scale. Here, we challenge that view by demonstrating that the infection of human dendritic cells (DCs) with a live pathogenic bacteria is associated with rapid and active demethylation at thousands of loci, independent of cell division. We performed an integrated analysis of data on genome-wide DNA methylation, histone mark patterns, chromatin accessibility, and gene expression, before and after infection. We found that infection-induced demethylation rarely occurs at promoter regions and instead localizes to distal enhancer elements, including those that regulate the activation of key immune transcription factors. Active demethylation is associated with extensive epigenetic remodeling, including the gain of histone activation marks and increased chromatin accessibility, and is strongly predictive of changes in the expression levels of nearby genes. Collectively, our observations show that active, rapid changes in DNA methylation in enhancers play a previously unappreciated role in regulating the transcriptional response to infection, even in non-proliferating cells.
- Received March 10, 2015.
- Accepted September 17, 2015.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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