Functional compensation among HMGN variants modulates the DNase I hypersensitive sites at enhancers
- Tao Deng1,
- Z. Iris Zhu2,
- Shaofei Zhang1,
- Yuri Postnikov1,
- Di Huang2,
- Marion Horrsch3,
- Takashi Furusawa1,
- Johannes Beckers3,
- Jan Rozman3,
- Martin Klingenspor3,
- Oana Amarie3,
- Jochen Graw3,
- Birgit Rathkolb3,
- Eckhard Wolf4,
- Thure Adler3,
- Dirk H. Busch4,
- Valerie Galius-Durner3,
- Helmut Fuchs3,
- Martin Hrabe de Angelis3,
- Arjan van der Velde5,
- Lino Tessarollo1,
- Ivan Ovcherenko2,
- David Landsman2 and
- Michael Bustin1,6
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: bustinm{at}mail.nih.gov
Abstract
DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) are a hallmark of chromatin regions containing regulatory DNA such as enhancers and promoters; however, the factors affecting the establishment and maintenance of these sites are not fully understood. We now show that HMGN1 and HMGN2, nucleosome-binding proteins that are ubiquitously expressed in vertebrate cells, maintain the DHSs landscape of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) synergistically. Loss of one of these HMGN variants led to a compensatory increase of binding of the remaining variant. Genome wide mapping of the DHSs in Hmgn1-/-, Hmgn2-/- and Hmgn1-/-n2-/- MEFs reveals that loss of both, but not a single HMGN variant, leads to significant remodeling of the DHSs landscape, especially at enhancer regions marked by H3K4me1 and H3K27ac. Loss of HMGN variants affects the induced expression of stress responsive genes in MEFs, the transcription profiles of several mouse tissues, and leads to altered phenotypes that are not seen in mice lacking only one variant. We conclude that the compensatory binding of HMGN variants to chromatin maintains the DHSs landscape and the transcription fidelity and is necessary to retain wild type phenotypes. Our study provides insights into mechanisms that maintain regulatory sites in chromatin and into functional compensation among nucleosome binding architectural proteins.
- Received March 17, 2015.
- Accepted July 7, 2015.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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