Artículos de revistas
Transient genome-wide interactions of the master transcription factor NLP7 initiate a rapid nitrogen-response cascade
Fecha
2020-03-02Registro en:
2041-1723
ID de PubMed: 32123177
Número WOS: WOS:000520939400001
10.1038/s41467-020-14979-6
Autor
Alvarez, Jose M. [Centro de Genómica y Bioinformática, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Mayor, Chile]
Schinke, Anna-Lena
Brooks, Matthew D.
Pasquino, Angelo
Leonelli, Lauriebeth
Varala, Kranthi
Safi, Alaeddine
Krouk, Gabriel
Krapp, Anne
Coruzzi, Gloria M.
Institución
Resumen
Dynamic reprogramming of gene regulatory networks (GRNs) enables organisms to rapidly respond to environmental perturbation. However, the underlying transient interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and genome-wide targets typically elude biochemical detection. Here, we capture both stable and transient TF-target interactions genome-wide within minutes after controlled TF nuclear import using time-series chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP-seq) and/or DNA adenine methyltransferase identification (DamID-seq). The transient TF-target interactions captured uncover the early mode-of-action of NIN-LIKE PROTEIN 7 (NLP7), a master regulator of the nitrogen signaling pathway in plants. These transient NLP7 targets captured in root cells using temporal TF perturbation account for 50% of NLP7-regulated genes not detectably bound by NLP7 in planta. Rapid and transient NLP7 binding activates early nitrogen response TFs, which we validate to amplify the NLP7-initiated transcriptional cascade. Our approaches to capture transient TF-target interactions genome-wide can be applied to validate dynamic GRN models for any pathway or organism of interest. Conventional methods cannot reveal transient transcription factors (TFs) and targets interactions. Here, Alvarez et al. capture both stable and transient TF-target interactions by time-series ChIP-seq and/or DamID-seq in a cell-based TF perturbation system and show NLP7 as a master TF to initiate a rapid nitrogen-response cascade.