iScience
Volume 25, Issue 3, 18 March 2022, 103840
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Article
Interferons reshape the 3D conformation and accessibility of macrophage chromatin

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.103840Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Type I IFN and IFN-γ rapidly increase chromatin accessibility at many target loci

  • Both IFN types cause rapid chromatin loop rearrangements at target loci

  • Loop formation increases between regions of accessible promoter chromatin

  • Large contribution of transcription factor ISGF3 to gene control by both IFN types

Summary

Engagement of macrophages in innate immune responses is directed by type I and type II interferons (IFN-I and IFN-γ, respectively). IFN triggers drastic changes in cellular transcriptomes, executed by JAK-STAT signal transduction and the transcriptional control of interferon-stimulated genes (ISG) by STAT transcription factors. Here, we study the immediate-early nuclear response to IFN-I and IFN-γ in murine macrophages. We show that the mechanism of gene control by both cytokines includes a rapid increase of DNA accessibility and rearrangement of the 3D chromatin contacts particularly between open chromatin of ISG loci. IFN-stimulated gene factor 3 (ISGF3), the major transcriptional regulator of ISG, controlled homeostatic and, most notably, induced-state DNA accessibility at a subset of ISG. Increases in DNA accessibility correlated with the appearance of activating histone marks at surrounding nucleosomes. Collectively our data emphasize changes in the three-dimensional nuclear space and epigenome as an important facet of transcriptional control by the IFN-induced JAK-STAT pathway.

Subject areas

Molecular biology
Molecular mechanism of gene regulation
Epigenetics
Cell biology

Data and code availability

Data: Publicly available raw data processed in this paper are available under accession numbers GEO: GSE115435 (IRF9 ChIP-seq), ArrayExpress: E-MTAB-2972 (Pol II ChIP-seq), GEO: GSE56123 (H3K27Ac). Raw data generated for this publication in HiC and ATAC-seq experiments are available under SRA BioProject: PRJNA694816.

Code: The paper does not report original code. All software and pipelines used in our study are listed and referenced in the key resources table.

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