AI Article Synopsis

  • Cis-regulatory mutations play a key role in phenotypic evolution, but identifying their locations in non-coding regions (like promoters and enhancers) is difficult, leading to fewer known examples compared to amino acid-altering mutations.
  • The study utilized histone modification mapping and chromatin accessibility techniques (CUT&Tag and ATAC-seq) on the threespine stickleback fish to establish a link between active histone marks and high gene expression, while repressive marks correlated with lower expression levels.
  • The research found that regions with distinct histone modifications had greater nucleotide diversity and revealed specific genomic alterations (insertions and deletions) linked to different ecotypes, highlighting the utility of histone analysis for identifying regulatory elements

Article Abstract

Background: Cis-regulatory mutations often underlie phenotypic evolution. However, because identifying the locations of promoters and enhancers in non-coding regions is challenging, we have fewer examples of identified causative cis-regulatory mutations that underlie naturally occurring phenotypic variations than of causative amino acid-altering mutations. Because cis-regulatory elements have epigenetic marks of specific histone modifications, we can detect cis-regulatory elements by mapping and analyzing them. Here, we investigated histone modifications and chromatin accessibility with cleavage under targets and tagmentation (CUT&Tag) and assay for transposase-accessible chromatin-sequencing (ATAC-seq).

Results: Using the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) as a model, we confirmed that the genes for which nearby regions showed active marks, such as H3K4me1, H3K4me3, and high chromatin accessibility, were highly expressed. In contrast, the expression levels of genes for which nearby regions showed repressive marks, such as H3K27me3, were reduced, suggesting that our chromatin analysis protocols overall worked well. Genomic regions with peaks of histone modifications showed higher nucleotide diversity within and between populations. By comparing gene expression in the gills of the marine and stream ecotypes, we identified several insertions and deletions (indels) with transposable element fragments in the candidate cis-regulatory regions.

Conclusions: Thus, mapping and analyzing histone modifications can help identify cis-regulatory elements and accelerate the identification of causative mutations in the non-coding regions underlying naturally occurring phenotypic variations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11241946PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-024-10602-wDOI Listing

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