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Cellular zinc status alters chromatin accessibility and binding of transcription factor p53 to genomic sites.

Leah J DamonDaniel OcampoLynn SanfordTaylor JonesMary A AllenRobin D DowellAmy E Palmer
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Zinc (Zn 2+ ) is an essential metal required by approximately 2500 proteins. Nearly half of these proteins act on DNA, including > 850 human transcription factors, polymerases, DNA damage response factors, and proteins involved in chromatin architecture. How these proteins acquire their essential Zn 2+ cofactor and whether they are sensitive to changes in the labile Zn 2+ pool in cells remain open questions. Here, we examine how changes in the labile Zn 2+ pool affect chromatin accessibility and transcription factor binding to DNA. We observed both increases and decreases in accessibility in different chromatin regions via ATAC-seq upon treating MCF10A cells with elevated Zn 2+ or the Zn 2+ -specific chelator tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (TPA). Transcription factor enrichment analysis was used to correlate changes in chromatin accessibility with transcription factor motifs, revealing 477 transcription factor motifs that were differentially enriched upon Zn 2+ perturbation. 186 of these transcription factor motifs were enriched in Zn 2+ and depleted in TPA, and the majority correspond to Zn 2+ finger transcription factors. We selected TP53 as a candidate to examine how changes in motif enrichment correlate with changes in transcription factor occupancy by ChIP-qPCR. Using publicly available ChIP-seq and nascent transcription datasets, we narrowed the 50,000+ ATAC-seq peaks to 2164 TP53 targets and subsequently selected 6 high-probability TP53 binding sites for testing. ChIP-qPCR revealed that for 5 of the 6 targets, TP53 binding correlates with the local accessibility determined by ATAC-seq. These results demonstrate that changes in labile zinc directly alter chromatin accessibility and transcription factor binding to DNA.
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