4.5 Article

A quantitative metric of pioneer activity reveals that HNF4A has stronger in vivo pioneer activity than FOXA1

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13059-022-02792-x

Keywords

Pioneer factor; Pioneer activity; Transcription factor binding; FOXA1; HNF4A; Genomics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM092910, T32HG000045, T32GM007200]

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This study presents a quantitative in vivo measure of pioneer activity, which captures the relative difference in a transcription factor's ability to bind accessible versus inaccessible DNA. The research findings suggest that the relative binding affinities of transcription factors can serve as reasonable measures of pioneer activity, highlighting the context-dependent nature of pioneer activity for most transcription factors.
Background We and others have suggested that pioneer activity - a transcription factor's (TF's) ability to bind and open inaccessible loci - is not a qualitative trait limited to a select class of pioneer TFs. We hypothesize that most TFs display pioneering activity that depends on the TF concentration and the motif content at their target loci. Results Here, we present a quantitative in vivo measure of pioneer activity that captures the relative difference in a TF's ability to bind accessible versus inaccessible DNA. The metric is based on experiments that use CUT&Tag to measure the binding of doxycycline-inducible TFs. For each location across the genome, we determine the concentration of doxycycline required for a TF to reach half-maximal occupancy; lower concentrations reflect higher affinity. We propose that the relative difference in a TF's affinity between ATAC-seq labeled accessible and inaccessible binding sites is a measure of its pioneer activity. We estimate binding affinities at tens of thousands of genomic loci for the endodermal TFs FOXA1 and HNF4A and show that HNF4A has stronger pioneer activity than FOXA1. We show that both FOXA1 and HNF4A display higher binding affinity at inaccessible sites with more copies of their respective motifs. The quantitative analysis of binding suggests different modes of binding for FOXA1, including an anti-cooperative mode of binding at certain accessible loci. Conclusions Our results suggest that relative binding affinities are reasonable measures of pioneer activity and support the model wherein most TFs have some degree of context-dependent pioneer activity.

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