Resolving diverse protein–DNA footprints from exonuclease-based ChIP experiments

Abstract Motivation High-throughput chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) sequencing-based assays capture genomic regions associated with the profiled transcription factor (TF). ChIP-exo is a modified protocol, which uses lambda exonuclease to digest DNA close to the TF-DNA complex, in order to impro...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBioinformatics Vol. 37; no. Supplement_1; pp. i367 - i375
Main Authors Biswas, Anushua, Narlikar, Leelavati
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford University Press 12.07.2021
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Summary:Abstract Motivation High-throughput chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) sequencing-based assays capture genomic regions associated with the profiled transcription factor (TF). ChIP-exo is a modified protocol, which uses lambda exonuclease to digest DNA close to the TF-DNA complex, in order to improve on the positional resolution of the TF-DNA contact. Because the digestion occurs in the 5′–3′ orientation, the protocol produces directional footprints close to the complex, on both sides of the double stranded DNA. Like all ChIP-based methods, ChIP-exo reports a mixture of different regions associated with the TF: those bound directly to the TF as well as via intermediaries. However, the distribution of footprints are likely to be indicative of the complex forming at the DNA. Results We present ExoDiversity, which uses a model-based framework to learn a joint distribution over footprints and motifs, thus resolving the mixture of ChIP-exo footprints into diverse binding modes. It uses no prior motif or TF information and automatically learns the number of different modes from the data. We show its application on a wide range of TFs and organisms/cell-types. Because its goal is to explain the complete set of reported regions, it is able to identify co-factor TF motifs that appear in a small fraction of the dataset. Further, ExoDiversity discovers small nucleotide variations within and outside canonical motifs, which co-occur with variations in footprints, suggesting that the TF-DNA structural configuration at those regions is likely to be different. Finally, we show that detected modes have specific DNA shape features and conservation signals, giving insights into the structure and function of the putative TF-DNA complexes. Availability and implementation The code for ExoDiversity is available on https://github.com/NarlikarLab/exoDIVERSITY. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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ISSN:1367-4803
1460-2059
1367-4811
DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/btab274