학술논문

DiMeLo-seq: a long-read, single-molecule method for mapping protein–DNA interactions genome wide
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Methods. 19(6)
Subject
Biotechnology
Human Genome
Genetics
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Generic health relevance
Centromere Protein A
Chromatin
DNA
DNA Methylation
Genome
Human
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Humans
Sequence Analysis
DNA
Biological Sciences
Technology
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Language
Abstract
Studies of genome regulation routinely use high-throughput DNA sequencing approaches to determine where specific proteins interact with DNA, and they rely on DNA amplification and short-read sequencing, limiting their quantitative application in complex genomic regions. To address these limitations, we developed directed methylation with long-read sequencing (DiMeLo-seq), which uses antibody-tethered enzymes to methylate DNA near a target protein's binding sites in situ. These exogenous methylation marks are then detected simultaneously with endogenous CpG methylation on unamplified DNA using long-read, single-molecule sequencing technologies. We optimized and benchmarked DiMeLo-seq by mapping chromatin-binding proteins and histone modifications across the human genome. Furthermore, we identified where centromere protein A localizes within highly repetitive regions that were unmappable with short sequencing reads, and we estimated the density of centromere protein A molecules along single chromatin fibers. DiMeLo-seq is a versatile method that provides multimodal, genome-wide information for investigating protein-DNA interactions.