Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Summary
Differential use of identical DNA sequences leads to distinct tissue lineages and then multiple cell types within a lineage, an epigenetic process central to progenitor and stem cell biology. The associated genomic changes, especially in native tissues, remain insufficiently understood, and are hereby addressed in the mouse lung, where the same lineage transcription factor NKX2-1 promotes the diametrically opposed alveolar type 1 (AT1) versus AT2 cell fate. We show that the cell-type-specific function of NKX2-1 is attributed to its differential chromatin binding that is acquired or retained during development in coordination with partner transcriptional factors. Loss of YAP/TAZ redirects NKX2-1 from its AT1-specific to AT2-specific binding sites, leading to transcriptionally exaggerated AT2 cells when deleted in progenitors or AT1-to-AT2 conversion when deleted after fate commitment. Nkx2-1 mutant AT1 and AT2 cells gain distinct accessible sites including those of the opposite fate while adopting the gastrointestinal fate, suggesting an epigenetic plasticity larger than a transcriptional one. Our genomic analysis of single or purified cells, coupled with precision genetics, provides an epigenetic roadmap of alveolar cell fate and potential, and introduces an experimental benchmark for unraveling the in vivo function of lineage transcription factors.
Overall design
ChIP-seq on Chromatin obtained from nuclei of either whole lungs, AT1, or AT2 cells. If AT1 or AT2 cells, then nuclei were sorted for GFP expression as a result of recombination of RosaSun1GFP undercontrol of a cell type specific driver.