4.8 Article

Integrated microfluidic approach for quantitative high-throughput measurements of transcription factor binding affinities

期刊

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
卷 44, 期 6, 页码 -

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkv1327

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资金

  1. European council [3309600]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [715/11, 317/13]
  3. Raymond and Beverly Sackler chair in Bioinformatics
  4. Edmond J. Safra Center for Bioinformatics at Tel Aviv University
  5. ERC [3309600]

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Protein binding to DNA is a fundamental process in gene regulation. Methodologies such as ChIP-Seq and mapping of DNase I hypersensitive sites provide global information on this regulation in vivo. In vitro methodologies provide valuable complementary information on protein-DNA specificities. However, current methods still do not measure absolute binding affinities. There is a real need for large-scale quantitative protein-DNA affinity measurements. We developed QPID, a microfluidic application for measuring protein-DNA affinities. A single run is equivalent to 4096 gel-shift experiments. Using QPID, we characterized the different affinities of ATF1, c-Jun, c-Fos and AP-1 to the CRE consensusmotif and CRE half-site in two different genomic sequences on a single device. We discovered that binding of ATF1, but not of AP-1, to the CRE half-site is highly affected by its genomic context. This effect was highly correlated with ATF1 ChIP-seq and PBM experiments. Next, we characterized the affinities of ATF1 and ATF3 to 128 genomic CRE and CRE half-site sequences. Our affinity measurements explained that in vivo binding differences between ATF1 and ATF3 to CRE and CRE half-sites are partially mediated by differences in the minor groove width. We believe that QPID would become a central tool for quantitative characterization of biophysical aspects affecting protein-DNA binding.

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