Litcius/Paper detail

Efficient chromatin accessibility mapping in situ by nucleosome-tethered tagmentation

Steven Henikoff, Jorja G. Henikoff, Hatice S Kaya-Okur, Kami Ahmad

2020eLife164 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chromatin accessibility mapping is a powerful approach to identify potential regulatory elements. A popular example is ATAC-seq, whereby Tn5 transposase inserts sequencing adapters into accessible DNA ('tagmentation'). CUT&Tag is a tagmentation-based epigenomic profiling method in which antibody tethering of Tn5 to a chromatin epitope of interest profiles specific chromatin features in small samples and single cells. Here, we show that by simply modifying the tagmentation conditions for histone H3K4me2 or H3K4me3 CUT&Tag, antibody-tethered tagmentation of accessible DNA sites is redirected to produce chromatin accessibility maps that are indistinguishable from the best ATAC-seq maps. Thus, chromatin accessibility maps can be produced in parallel with CUT&Tag maps of other epitopes with all steps from nuclei to amplified sequencing-ready libraries performed in single PCR tubes in the laboratory or on a home workbench. As H3K4 methylation is produced by transcription at promoters and enhancers, our method identifies transcription-coupled accessible regulatory sites.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatinEpigenomicsComputational biologyEnhancerHistoneNucleosomeBiologyChIP-sequencingChIA-PETDNA methylationDNAGeneticsCell biologyTranscription factorGeneGene expressionGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA modifications and cancerCancer-related gene regulation