Deaminase-mediated chromatin accessibility profiling with single-allele resolution

Tian Yu(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Zhijian Li(Broad Institute), Ellie Gibbs(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Reina Iwase(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Matthew Francoeur(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Quang Vinh Phan(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jing Zhao(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jane Rosin(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Philip A. Cole(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Luca Pinello(Broad Institute), Richard I. Sherwood(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
December 20, 2024
Cited by 5Open Access
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Abstract

Binding of transcription factors (TFs) at gene regulatory elements controls cellular epigenetic state and gene expression. Current genome-wide chromatin profiling approaches have inherently limited resolution, complicating assessment of TF occupancy and co-occupancy, especially at individual alleles. In this work, we introduce Accessible Chromatin by Cytosine Editing Site Sequencing with ATAC-seq (ACCESS-ATAC), which harnesses a double-stranded DNA cytosine deaminase (Ddd) enzyme to stencil TF binding locations within accessible chromatin regions. We optimize bulk and single-cell ACCESS-ATAC protocols and develop computational methods to show that the increased resolution compared with ATAC-seq improves the accuracy of TF binding site prediction. We use ACCESS-ATAC to perform genome-wide allelic occupancy and co-occupancy imputation for 64 TFs each in HepG2 and K562, revealing that the propensity of a majority of TFs to co-occupy nearby motifs oscillates with a period approximating the helical turn of DNA. Altogether, ACCESS-ATAC expands the resolution and capabilities of bulk and single-cell epigenomic profiling.


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