Single chromatin fiber profiling and nucleosome position mapping in the human brain. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • We apply a single-molecule chromatin fiber sequencing (Fiber-seq) protocol designed for amplification-free cell-type-specific mapping of the regulatory architecture at nucleosome resolution along extended ∼10-kb chromatin fibers to neuronal and non-neuronal nuclei sorted from human brain tissue. Specifically, application of this method enables the resolution of cell-selective promoter and enhancer architectures on single fibers, including transcription factor footprinting and position mapping, with sequence-specific fixation of nucleosome arrays flanking transcription start sites and regulatory motifs. We uncover haplotype-specific chromatin patterns, multiple regulatory elements cis-aligned on individual fibers, and accessible chromatin at 20,000 unique sites encompassing retrotransposons and other repeat sequences hitherto "unmappable" by short-read epigenomic sequencing. Overall, we show that Fiber-seq is applicable to human brain tissue, offering sharp demarcation of nucleosome-depleted regions at sites of open chromatin in conjunction with multi-kilobase nucleosomal positioning at single-fiber resolution on a genome-wide scale.

publication date

  • December 3, 2024

Research

keywords

  • Brain
  • Chromatin
  • Nucleosomes

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85212099779

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.crmeth.2024.100911

PubMed ID

  • 39631398

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 4

issue

  • 12