Systematic epigenome editing captures the context-dependent instructive function of chromatin modifications.
Cristina PolicarpiMarzia MunafòStylianos TsagkrisValentina CarliniJamie A HackettPublished in: Nature genetics (2024)
Chromatin modifications are linked with regulating patterns of gene expression, but their causal role and context-dependent impact on transcription remains unresolved. Here we develop a modular epigenome editing platform that programs nine key chromatin modifications, or combinations thereof, to precise loci in living cells. We couple this with single-cell readouts to systematically quantitate the magnitude and heterogeneity of transcriptional responses elicited by each specific chromatin modification. Among these, we show that installing histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) at promoters can causally instruct transcription by hierarchically remodeling the chromatin landscape. We further dissect how DNA sequence motifs influence the transcriptional impact of chromatin marks, identifying switch-like and attenuative effects within distinct cis contexts. Finally, we examine the interplay of combinatorial modifications, revealing that co-targeted H3K27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) and H2AK119 monoubiquitination (H2AK119ub) maximizes silencing penetrance across single cells. Our precision-perturbation strategy unveils the causal principles of how chromatin modification(s) influence transcription and dissects how quantitative responses are calibrated by contextual interactions.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- dna damage
- single cell
- living cells
- crispr cas
- single molecule
- fluorescent probe
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- drug delivery
- heat stress
- circulating tumor
- cancer therapy
- mass spectrometry
- circulating tumor cells