Integrative analysis reveals multiple modes of LXR transcriptional regulation in liver.
Lara BideyanWenxin FanKarolina Elżbieta Kaczor-UrbanowiczChristina PriestDavid CaseroPeter TontonozPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The nuclear receptors liver X receptor (LXR) α and β play crucial roles in hepatic metabolism. Many genes induced in response to pharmacologic LXR agonism have been defined; however, the transcriptional consequences of loss of LXR binding to its genomic targets are less well characterized. Here, we addressed how deletion of both LXRα and LXRβ from mouse liver (LXR double knockout [DKO]) affects the transcriptional regulatory landscape by integrating changes in LXR binding, chromatin accessibility, and gene expression. Many genes involved in fatty acid metabolism showed reduced expression and chromatin accessibility at their intergenic and intronic regions in LXRDKO livers. Genes that were up-regulated with LXR deletion had increased chromatin accessibility at their promoter regions and were enriched for functions not linked to lipid metabolism. Loss of LXR binding in liver reduced the activity of a broad set of hepatic transcription factors, inferred through changes in motif accessibility. By contrast, accessibility at promoter nuclear factor Y (NF-Y) motifs was increased in the absence of LXR. Unexpectedly, we also defined a small set of LXR targets for direct ligand-dependent repression. These genes have LXR-binding sites but showed increased expression in LXRDKO liver and reduced expression in response to the LXR agonist. In summary, the binding of LXRs to the hepatic genome has broad effects on the transcriptional landscape that extend beyond its canonical function as an activator of lipid metabolic genes.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- nuclear factor
- poor prognosis
- dna methylation
- fatty acid
- binding protein
- dna binding
- genome wide identification
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- long non coding rna
- signaling pathway
- magnetic resonance
- inflammatory response
- copy number
- diabetic rats
- heat shock
- high glucose
- network analysis
- contrast enhanced