Dynamics of chromatin accessibility and long-range interactions in response to glucocorticoid pulsing

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Abstract

Although physiological steroid levels are often pulsatile (ultradian), the genomic effects of this pulsatility are poorly understood. By utilizing glucocorticoid receptor (GR) signaling as a model system, we uncovered striking spatiotemporal relationships between receptor loading, lifetimes of the DNase I hypersensitivity sites (DHSs), long-range interactions, and gene regulation. We found that hormone-induced DHSs were enriched within ±50 kb of GR-responsive genes and displayed a broad spectrum of lifetimes upon hormone withdrawal. These lifetimes dictate the strength of the DHS interactions with gene targets and contribute to gene regulation from a distance. Our results demonstrate that pulsatile and constant hormone stimulations induce unique, treatment-specific patterns of gene and regulatory element activation. These modes of activation have implications for corticosteroid function in vivo and for steroid therapies in various clinical settings.

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Stavreva, D. A., Coulon, A., Baek, S., Sung, M. H., John, S., Stixova, L., … Hager, G. L. (2015). Dynamics of chromatin accessibility and long-range interactions in response to glucocorticoid pulsing. Genome Research, 25(6), 845–857. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.184168.114

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