High-Resolution Mapping of Chromatin Conformation in Cardiac Myocytes Reveals Structural Remodeling of the Epigenome in Heart Failure.

Circulation

From Departments of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine (M.R.-G., D.J.C., T.H.K., E.K., E.M., T.-T.S., E.S., S.R., Y.W., T.M.V.), Medicine (D.L., P.P., Y.W., T.M.V.), Physiology (P.P.,Y.W., T.M.V.), Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology (M.P.), UCLA, Los Angeles, CA; Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City (E.B.); Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Institute of Genomic Medicine, and Moores Cancer Center, UCSD, San Diego, CA (A.D.S., B.R.); and Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (N.J.G.).

Published: October 2017

Background: Cardiovascular disease is associated with epigenomic changes in the heart; however, the endogenous structure of cardiac myocyte chromatin has never been determined.

Methods: To investigate the mechanisms of epigenomic function in the heart, genome-wide chromatin conformation capture (Hi-C) and DNA sequencing were performed in adult cardiac myocytes following development of pressure overload-induced hypertrophy. Mice with cardiac-specific deletion of CTCF (a ubiquitous chromatin structural protein) were generated to explore the role of this protein in chromatin structure and cardiac phenotype. Transcriptome analyses by RNA-seq were conducted as a functional readout of the epigenomic structural changes.

Results: Depletion of CTCF was sufficient to induce heart failure in mice, and human patients with heart failure receiving mechanical unloading via left ventricular assist devices show increased CTCF abundance. Chromatin structural analyses revealed interactions within the cardiac myocyte genome at 5-kb resolution, enabling examination of intra- and interchromosomal events, and providing a resource for future cardiac epigenomic investigations. Pressure overload or CTCF depletion selectively altered boundary strength between topologically associating domains and A/B compartmentalization, measurements of genome accessibility. Heart failure involved decreased stability of chromatin interactions around disease-causing genes. In addition, pressure overload or CTCF depletion remodeled long-range interactions of cardiac enhancers, resulting in a significant decrease in local chromatin interactions around these functional elements.

Conclusions: These findings provide a high-resolution chromatin architecture resource for cardiac epigenomic investigations and demonstrate that global structural remodeling of chromatin underpins heart failure. The newly identified principles of endogenous chromatin structure have key implications for epigenetic therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5648689PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.029430DOI Listing

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