Genome-wide transcription factor–binding maps reveal cell-specific changes in the regulatory architecture of human HSPCs

Author:

Subramanian Shruthi1ORCID,Thoms Julie A. I.2ORCID,Huang Yizhou3ORCID,Cornejo-Páramo Paola4ORCID,Koch Forrest C.5ORCID,Jacquelin Sebastien6ORCID,Shen Sylvie7,Song Emma7,Joshi Swapna1,Brownlee Chris8,Woll Petter S.9ORCID,Chacon-Fajardo Diego3ORCID,Beck Dominik3,Curtis David J.10ORCID,Yehson Kenneth11,Antonenas Vicki11,O'Brien Tracey12ORCID,Trickett Annette7,Powell Jason A.1314,Lewis Ian D.13,Pitson Stuart M.13ORCID,Gandhi Maher K.15ORCID,Lane Steven W.16ORCID,Vafaee Fatemeh517ORCID,Wong Emily S.45ORCID,Göttgens Berthold18ORCID,Alinejad-Rokny Hamid19,Wong Jason W. H.20ORCID,Pimanda John E.1221ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1School of Clinical Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

2. 2School of Biomedical Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

3. 3Centre for Health Technologies and the School of Biomedical Engineering, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia

4. 4Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, Sydney, Australia

5. 5School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

6. 6Macrophage Biology Laboratory, Mater Research, Brisbane, Australia

7. 7Bone Marrow Transplant Laboratory, NSW Health Pathology, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, NSW, Australia

8. 8Mark Wainwright Analytical Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

9. 9Department of Medicine, Center for Hematology and Regenerative Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden

10. 10Australian Centre for Blood Diseases, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

11. 11Blood Transplant and Cell Therapies Laboratory, NSW Health Pathology, Westmead, NSW, Australia

12. 12Sydney Children's Hospital, Sydney, Australia

13. 13Centre for Cancer Biology, SA Pathology, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

14. 14Adelaide Medical School, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

15. 15Blood Cancer Research Group, Mater Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

16. 16Cancer Program, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research, Brisbane, Australia

17. 17UNSW Data Science Hub, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

18. 18Wellcome-MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

19. 19BioMedical Machine Learning Lab, Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

20. 20School of Biomedical Sciences, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China

21. 21Haematology Department, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) rely on a complex interplay among transcription factors (TFs) to regulate differentiation into mature blood cells. A heptad of TFs (FLI1, ERG, GATA2, RUNX1, TAL1, LYL1, LMO2) bind regulatory elements in bulk CD34+ HSPCs. However, whether specific heptad-TF combinations have distinct roles in regulating hematopoietic differentiation remains unknown. We mapped genome-wide chromatin contacts (HiC, H3K27ac, HiChIP), chromatin modifications (H3K4me3, H3K27ac, H3K27me3) and 10 TF binding profiles (heptad, PU.1, CTCF, STAG2) in HSPC subsets (stem/multipotent progenitors plus common myeloid, granulocyte macrophage, and megakaryocyte erythrocyte progenitors) and found TF occupancy and enhancer-promoter interactions varied significantly across cell types and were associated with cell-type–specific gene expression. Distinct regulatory elements were enriched with specific heptad-TF combinations, including stem-cell–specific elements with ERG, and myeloid- and erythroid-specific elements with combinations of FLI1, RUNX1, GATA2, TAL1, LYL1, and LMO2. Furthermore, heptad-occupied regions in HSPCs were subsequently bound by lineage-defining TFs, including PU.1 and GATA1, suggesting that heptad factors may prime regulatory elements for use in mature cell types. We also found that enhancers with cell-type–specific heptad occupancy shared a common grammar with respect to TF binding motifs, suggesting that combinatorial binding of TF complexes was at least partially regulated by features encoded in DNA sequence motifs. Taken together, this study comprehensively characterizes the gene regulatory landscape in rare subpopulations of human HSPCs. The accompanying data sets should serve as a valuable resource for understanding adult hematopoiesis and a framework for analyzing aberrant regulatory networks in leukemic cells.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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