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Biological chromodynamics a general method for measuring protein occupancy across the genome by calibrating ChIP-seq.pdf (6.63 MB)

Biological chromodynamics: a general method for measuring protein occupancy across the genome by calibrating ChIP-seq

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 23:50 authored by Bin Hu, Naomi Petela, Alexander Kurze, Kok-Lung ChanKok-Lung Chan, Christophe Chapard, Kim Nasmyth
Sequencing DNA fragments associated with proteins following in vivo cross-linking with formaldehyde (known as ChIP-seq) has been used extensively to describe the distribution of proteins across genomes. It is not widely appreciated that this method merely estimates a protein's distribution and cannot reveal changes in occupancy between samples. To do this, we tagged with the same epitope orthologous proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida glabrata, whose sequences have diverged to a degree that most DNA fragments longer than 50 bp are unique to just one species. By mixing defined numbers of C. glabrata cells (the calibration genome) with S. cerevisiae samples (the experimental genomes) prior to chromatin fragmentation and immunoprecipitation, it is possible to derive a quantitative measure of occupancy (the occupancy ratio – OR) that enables a comparison of occupancies not only within but also between genomes. We demonstrate for the first time that this ‘internal standard’ calibration method satisfies the sine qua non for quantifying ChIP-seq profiles, namely linearity over a wide range. Crucially, by employing functional tagged proteins, our calibration process describes a method that distinguishes genuine association within ChIP-seq profiles from background noise. Our method is applicable to any protein, not merely highly conserved ones, and obviates the need for the time consuming, expensive, and technically demanding quantification of ChIP using qPCR, which can only be performed on individual loci. As we demonstrate for the first time in this paper, calibrated ChIP-seq represents a major step towards documenting the quantitative distributions of proteins along chromosomes in different cell states, which we term biological chromodynamics.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Nucleic Acids Research

ISSN

0305-1048

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Issue

20

Volume

43

Page range

1-20

Article number

e132

Event location

England

Department affiliated with

  • Sussex Centre for Genome Damage Stability Publications

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2021-05-12

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2021-05-12

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2021-05-12