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Series GSE19906 Query DataSets for GSE19906
Status Public on Jun 07, 2010
Title Global analysis of histone modification patterns on the latent KSHV episome
Platform organism Human gammaherpesvirus 8
Sample organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Genome binding/occupancy profiling by genome tiling array
Summary Herpesvirus latency is generally thought to be governed by epigenetic modifications, but the dynamics of viral chromatin at early timepoints of latent infection are poorly understood. Here, we report a comprehensive spatial and temporal analysis of epigenetic modifications during latent infection with Kaposi's sarcoma associated herpesvirus (KSHV), the etiologic agent of Kaposi's sarcoma and primary effusion lymphoma (PEL). Using high resolution tiling microarrays in conjunction with immunprecipitation of methylated DNA (MeDIP) and modified histones (ChIP), we have determined global patterns of epigenetic modifications across the KSHV genome in several tumor-derived cell lines as well as de novo infected endothelial cells, revealing highly distinct landscapes of epigenetic modifications associated with latent KSHV infection. We find that KSHV genomes are subject to profound methylation at CpG dinucleotides, leading to the establishment of characteristic global DNA methylation patterns. However, such patterns evolved slowly and thus are unlikely to govern latency early during the infection process. In contrast, we observed that latent histone modification patterns were rapidly established upon a de novo infection. Our analysis furthermore demonstrates that such patterns are not characterized by the absence of activating histone modifications, since both H3K9/K14-ac and H3K4-me3 marks were prominently detected at several loci, including the promoter of the lytic cycle transactivator Rta. While these regions were furthermore largely devoid of the constitutive heterochromatin marker H3K9-me3, we observed rapid and widespread deposition of H3K27-me3 across latent KSHV genomes, a bivalent modification which is able to repress transcription despite of the simultaneous presence of activating marks. Our findings suggest that the epigenetic patterns identified here induce a poised state of repression during viral latency, which can be rapidly reversed once the lytic cycle is induced.

This dataset contains our ChIP-on-chip data; the MeDIP data are deposited in a separate dataset.
 
Overall design Analysis of histone modification patterns of the KSHV genome in the KSHV positive primary effusion lymphoma (PEL)-derived BCBL1 cell line, long-term in vitro infected SLK cells (SLKP), and de novo infected SLK cells at 5 days post infection (SLK5dpi).
 
Contributor(s) Günther T, Grundhoff A
Citation(s) 20532208
Submission date Jan 14, 2010
Last update date Mar 21, 2012
Contact name Thomas Guenther
E-mail(s) thomas.guenther@hpi.uni-hamburg.de
Organization name Heinrich-Pette-Institut
Department Mechanisms of Antiviral Defense
Lab AG75
Street address Martinistr.52
City Hamburg
ZIP/Postal code 20251
Country Germany
 
Platforms (1)
GPL9942 HPI-AG KSHV 15k v. 3.0
Samples (12)
GSM498063 SLK_Input
GSM498064 BCBL1_H3K9/14Ac
GSM498065 BCBL1_H3K4me3
This SubSeries is part of SuperSeries:
GSE19907 Global analysis of DNA methylation patterns and different histone modification patterns on the latent KSHV episome
Relations
BioProject PRJNA124027

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE19906_RAW.tar 17.8 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of GPR)
Processed data included within Sample table

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