Impact of the gut microbiota on enhancer accessibility in gut intraepithelial lymphocytes

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Abstract

The gut microbiota impacts many aspects of host biology including immune function. One hypothesis is that microbial communities induce epigenetic changes with accompanying alterations in chromatin accessibility, providing a mechanism that allows a community to have sustained host effects even in the face of its structural or functional variation. We used Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin with high-throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) to define chromatin accessibility in predicted enhancer regions of intestinal αβ+ and γδ+ intraepithelial lymphocytes purified from germ-free mice, their conventionally raised (CONV-R) counterparts, and mice reared germ free and then colonized with CONV-R gut microbiota at the end of the suckling-weaning transition. Characterizing genes adjacent to traditional enhancers and super-enhancers revealed signaling networks, metabolic pathways, and enhancer-associated transcription factors affected by the microbiota. Our results support the notion that epigenetic modifications help define microbial community-affiliated functional features of host immune cell lineages.

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Semenkovich, N. P., Planer, J. D., Ahern, P. P., Griffin, N. W., Lin, C. Y., & Gordon, J. I. (2016). Impact of the gut microbiota on enhancer accessibility in gut intraepithelial lymphocytes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(51), 14805–14810. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1617793113

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