Systematic analysis of chromatin state dynamics in nine human cell types
Abstract
Introduction
A major challenge in biology is to understand how a single genome can give rise to an organism comprising hundreds of distinct cell types. Much emphasis has been placed on the application of high-throughput tools to study interacting cellular components1. The field of systems biology has exploited dynamic gene expression patterns to reveal functional modules, pathways and networks2. Yet cis-regulatory elements, which may be equally dynamic, remain largely uncharted across cellular conditions.
Chromatin profiling provides a systematic means for detecting cis-regulatory elements, given the central role of chromatin in mediating regulatory signals and controlling DNA access, and the paucity of recognizable sequence signals. Specific histone modifications correlate with regulator binding, transcriptional initiation and elongation, enhancer activity and repression1,3-6. Combinations of modifications can provide even more precise insight into chromatin state7,8.
Here, we apply a high-throughput pipeline to map 9 chromatin marks and input controls across 9 cell types. We use recurrent combinations of marks to define 15 chromatin states corresponding to repressed, poised, and active promoters, strong and weak enhancers, putative insulators, transcribed regions, and large-scale repressed and inactive domains. We use directed experiments to validate biochemical and functional distinctions between states.
The resulting chromatin state maps portray a highly dynamic landscape, with the specific patterns of change across cell types revealing strong correlations between interacting functional elements. We use correlated patterns of activity between chromatin state, gene expression and regulator activity to connect enhancers to likely target genes, to predict cell type-specific activators and repressors, and to identify individual binding motifs responsible for these interactions.
Our results have implications for interpreting genome-wide association studies. We find that disease variants frequently coincide with enhancer elements specific to a relevant cell type. In several cases, we can predict upstream regulators whose regulatory motif instances are affected or target genes whose expression may be altered, thereby proposing specific mechanistic hypotheses for how disease-associated genotypes lead to the observed disease phenotypes.
Results
Systematic mapping of chromatin marks in multiple cell types
To explore chromatin state in a uniform way across multiple cell types, we applied a production pipeline for chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) to generate genome-wide chromatin datasets (see Methods, Fig. 1a). We profiled nine human cell types, including common lines designated by the ENCODE consortium1 and primary cell types. These consist of embryonic stem cells (H1 ES), erythrocytic leukemia cells (K562), B-lymphoblastoid cells (GM12878), hepatocellular carcinoma cells (HepG2), umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), skeletal muscle myoblasts (HSMM), normal lung fibroblasts (NHLF), normal epidermal keratinocytes (NHEK), and mammary epithelial cells (HMEC).
We used antibodies for histone H3 lysine 4 tri-methylation (H3K4me3), a modification associated with promoters4,5,9; H3K4me2, associated with promoters and enhancers1,3,6,9; H3K4me1, preferentially associated with enhancers1,6; lysine 9 acetylation (H3K9ac) and H3K27ac, associated with active regulatory regions9,10; H3K36me3 and H4K20me1, associated with transcribed regions3-5; H3K27me3, associated with Polycomb-repressed regions3,4; and CTCF, a sequence-specific insulator protein with diverse functions11. We validated each antibody by Western blots and peptide competitions, and sequenced input controls for each cell type. We also collected data for H3K9me3, RNAPII, and H2A.Z in a subset of cells.
This resulted in 90 chromatin maps corresponding to ~2.4 billion reads covering ~100 billion bases across nine cell types, which we set out to interpret computationally.
Learning a common set of chromatin states across cell types
To summarize these datasets into nine readily interpretable annotations, one per cell type, we applied a multivariate Hidden Markov Model (HMM) that uses combinatorial patterns of chromatin marks to distinguish chromatin states8. The approach explicitly models mark combinations in a set of ‘emission’ parameters and spatial relationships between neighboring genomic segments in a set of ‘transition’ parameters (see Methods). It has the advantage of capturing regulatory elements with greater reliability, robustness and precision relative to studying individual marks8.
We learned chromatin states jointly by creating a virtual concatenation of all chromosomes from all cell types. We selected 15 states which showed distinct biological enrichments and were consistently recovered (Fig. 1a,b; Supplementary Fig. 1). Even though states were learned de novo based solely on the patterns of chromatin marks and their spatial relationships, they showed distinct associations with transcriptional start sites (TSSs), transcripts, evolutionarily-conserved non-coding regions, DNase hypersensitive sites12, binding sites for the regulators, c-Myc13 and NF-κB14, and inactive genomic regions associated with the nuclear lamina15 (Fig. 1c).
We distinguished six broad classes of chromatin states, which we refer to as promoter, enhancer, insulator, transcribed, repressed, and inactive states (Fig. 1c). Within them, active, weak and poised4 promoters (states 1-3) differ in expression levels, strong and weak candidate enhancers (states 4-7) differ in expression of proximal genes, and strongly and weakly transcribed regions (states 9-11) also differ in their positional enrichments along transcripts. Similarly, Polycomb-repressed regions (state 12) differ from heterochromatic and repetitive states (states 13-15), which are also enriched for H3K9me3 (Supplementary Fig. 2-4).
The states vary widely in their average segment length (~500bp for promoter and enhancer states vs. 10 kb for inactive regions), and in the portion of the genome covered (<1% for promoter and enhancer states vs. >70% for inactive state 13). For each state, coverage was relatively stable across cell types (Supplementary Fig. 5), with the exception of ES cells in which the poised promoter state is more abundant while strong enhancer and Polycomb-repressed states are depleted, consistent with the unique biology of pluripotent cells4,16.
We confirmed that promoter and enhancer states showed distinct biochemical properties (Supplementary Fig. 6). RNAPII was highly enriched at strong promoters, weakly enriched at strong enhancers, and nearly undetectable at weak/poised enhancers, consistent with strong transcription at promoters, and reports of weak transcription at active enhancers17,18. H2A.Z, a histone variant associated with nucleosome free regions19, was enriched in active promoters and strong enhancers, consistent with nucleosome displacement at TSSs and sites of abundant transcription factor (TF) binding in active enhancers.
We also used luciferase reporter assays to validate the functionality of predicted enhancers, the distinction between strong and weak enhancer states, and their predicted cell type-specificity. We tested strong enhancers, weak enhancers, and strong enhancers specific to an unmatched cell type by transfection in HepG2 cells. We observed strong luciferase activity only for strong enhancer elements from the matched cell type (Fig. 1d).
These results and additional properties of the model (Supplementary Fig. 7-10) suggest that chromatin states are an inherent, biologically-informative feature of the genome. The framework enables us to reason about coordinated differences in marks by directly studying chromatin state changes between cell types (which we refer to as ‘changes’ or ‘dynamics’ without implying any temporal relationship).
Extent and significance of chromatin state changes across cell types
We next explored the extent to which chromatin states vary between pairs of cell types. The overall patterns of variability (Supplementary Fig. 11,12) suggest that regulatory regions vary dramatically in activity levels across cell types. Enhancer states show frequent interchange between strong and weak enhancers, and promoter states vary between active, weak and poised. Promoter states appear more stable than enhancers; they are eight times more likely to remain promoter states, controlling for coverage. Switching was also observed between promoter, enhancer, and transcriptional transition states, but no preferential changes were found to other groups. These general patterns suggest that despite varying activity levels, enhancer and promoter regions tend to preserve their chromatin identity as regions of regulatory potential.
Chromatin state differences between cell types relate to cell type-specific gene functions. An unbiased clustering of chromatin state profiles across annotated TSSs in lymphoblastoid and skeletal muscle cells distinguished informative patterns predictive of downstream gene expression and functional gene classes (Supplementary Fig. 13,14). Cell type-specific patterns were also evident when TSSs were simply assigned to the most prevalent chromatin state. Promoters activate in skeletal muscle were associated with extracellular structure genes (8.5-fold enrichment), those activate in lymphoblastoid cells with immune response genes (7.2-fold enrichment), and those active in both with metabolic housekeeping genes.
Clustering of promoter and enhancer states based on their activity patterns
Extending our pair-wise promoter analysis, we clustered strong promoter and strong enhancer regions across all cell types (see Methods). This revealed clusters showing common activity and associated with highly coherent functions (Fig. 2a,b). For promoter clusters, these include immune response (GM12878-specific clusters, p<10−18), cholesterol transport (HepG2-specific, 10−4), and metabolic processes (all cells, 10−131). Remarkably, genes assigned to enhancer clusters by proximity also showed strong functional enrichments, including immune response (GM12878-specific, 10−6), lipid metabolism (HepG2-specific, 10−5) and angiogenesis (HUVEC-specific, 10−4).
Promoters and enhancers differed in their overall specificity. The majority of promoter clusters showed activity in multiple cell types, consistent with previous work5,10 (Fig. 2a). Enhancer clusters are significantly more cell type-specific, with few regions showing activity in more than two cell types and a majority being specific to a single cell type (Fig. 2b).
We also found differences in the relative contributions of enhancer-based and promoter-based regulation among gene classes. Developmental genes appear strongly regulated by both, showing the highest number of proximal enhancers and diverse promoter states, including poised and Polycomb-repressed (Supplementary Fig. 15). Tissue-specific genes (e.g. immune genes, steroid metabolism genes) appear more dependent on enhancer regulation, showing multiple tissue-specific enhancers but less diverse promoter states. Lastly, housekeeping genes are primarily promoter-regulated with few enhancers in their vicinity.
Overall, this dynamic view of the chromatin landscape suggests that multi-cell chromatin profiles can be as productive for systems biology as expression analysis has traditionally been, and may hold additional information on genome regulatory programs, which we explore next.
Correlations in activity profiles link enhancers to target genes
We next investigated functional interconnections between enhancers, the factors that activate or repress them, and the genes whose expression they regulate, by defining ‘activity profiles’ for each across the cell types (Fig. 3). We complemented these enhancer activity profiles (Fig. 3a) with profiles for gene expression (Fig. 3b), sequence motif enrichment (Fig. 3d), and the expression of TFs recognizing each motif (Fig. 3e). We used correlations between these profiles to probabilistically link enhancers to their downstream targets and upstream regulators (see Methods).
We found that patterns of enhancer activity (Fig.2b,3a) correlated strongly with patterns of nearest-gene expression (Fig. 3b, correlation >0.9 in 16 of 20 clusters). Since this correlation remained high even for large distances (>50kb), we used activity correlation as a complement to genomic distance for linking enhancers to target genes (see Methods). Activity-based linking yielded increased functional gene class enrichments for several clusters (Supplementary Fig. 16).
We validated our approach using quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping studies which use co-variation between SNP alleles and gene expression levels to link cis-regulatory regions to target genes. Investigation of four recent QTL studies in liver20 and lymphoblastoid cells21-23 revealed remarkable agreement with our enhancer predictions. Enhancers linked to a given target gene by our method were significantly enriched for SNPs correlated with the gene’s expression level (Supplementary Fig. 17), thus confirming our enhancer-gene linkages with orthogonal data.
Correlations with TF expression and motif enrichment predict upstream regulators
We next predicted sequence-specific TFs likely to target enhancers in a given cluster based on regulatory motif enrichments. This implicated a number of TFs whose known biological roles matched the respective cell types (Fig. 3d, Supplementary Fig. 18). When ChIP-seq data was available in the relevant cell type, we confirmed that enriched motifs were preferentially bound by the cognate factor (Fig. 3c). Oct4 motif instances in cluster A (ES-specific enhancers) were preferentially bound by Oct4 in ES cells24, and NF-kB motif instances in cluster F (lymphoblastoid-specific enhancers) were preferentially bound by NF-kB in lymphoblastoid cells14. In both cases, motif instances in cell type-specific enhancers showed a ~5-fold increase in binding compared to other enhancers.
However, sequence-based motif enrichments do not distinguish causality. Enrichment could reflect a parallel binding event that does not affect the chromatin state, or the motif could actually be antagonistic to the enhancer state through specific repression in orthogonal cell types. To distinguish between these possibilities, we complemented the observed motif enrichments with cell type-specific expression for the corresponding TFs (Fig. 3e). We then correlated a ‘motif score’ based on motif enrichment in a given cluster, and a ‘TF-expression score’ based on the agreement between the TF expression pattern and the cluster activity profile (see Methods). A positive correlation between the two scores implies that the TF may be establishing or reinforcing the chromatin state. A negative correlation would instead imply that the TF may act as a repressor. For example, in addition to the enrichment of the Oct4 motif in the ES-specific cluster A, Oct4 is specifically expressed in ES cells, leading to its prediction as a causal regulator of ES cells (Fig. 3e), consistent with known biology16.
For 18 of the 20 clusters, this analysis revealed one or more candidate regulators. Recovery of known roles for well-studied regulators validated our approach. For example, HNF1, HNF4, and PPARγ are predicted as activators of HepG2-specific enhancers (clusters H,I), PU.1 and NF-κB as activators of lymphoblastoid (GM12878) enhancers (clusters C,F,G), Gata1 as an activator of K562-specific enhancers (cluster B) and Myf as an activator of skeletal muscle (HSMM) enhancers (cluster O)14,25-27.
The analysis also revealed potentially novel regulatory interactions. ETS factors (Elk1,Tel2,Ets) are predicted activators of enhancers active in both GM12878 and HUVEC (cluster G), but not of GM12878-specific or HUVEC-specific clusters emphasizing the value of unbiased clustering. These connections are consistent with reported roles for ETS factors in lymphopoiesis and endothelium28. The prediction of p53 as an activator in HSMM, NHLF, NHEK and HMEC (clusters N,Q,R) likely reflects its maintained activity in these primary cells as opposed to other cell models where it may be suppressed by mutation (K562)29, viral inactivation (GM12878)30 or cytoplasmic localization (ES cells)31. A widespread role for p53 in regulating distal elements is consistent with its known binding to distal regions32,33.
Our analysis also revealed several repressor signatures, including Gfi1 in K562 and GM12878 cells (clusters B,C) and Bach2 in ES cells (cluster A). Both regulators are known to repress transcription by recruiting histone deacetylases and methyltransferases to proximal promoters34,35, and Gfi1 has also been implicated in silencing of satellite repeats35. Our regulatory inferences suggest that they also modulate chromatin to inhibit enhancer activity, thus proposing a new mechanism for distal gene regulation.
Validation of predicted binding events and regulatory outcomes
The regulatory inferences above imply TF binding events at motif instances within enhancer regions in specific cellular contexts, which we sought to validate using a general molecular signature. Binding events are associated with nucleosome displacement, a structural change evident in ChIP-seq data for histones36. We thus studied local depletions in the chromatin intensity profiles (‘dips’) as indicative of TF binding. We confirmed that dips were present in individual signal tracks at active enhancers, and were associated with preferential sequence conservation and regulatory motif instances (Fig. 4a).
To test our specific predictions, we superimposed chromatin profiles of coordinately regulated enhancer regions, anchoring them on the implied motif instances. Striking dips precisely coincide with regulatory motifs, and are both cell type-specific and region-specific, exactly as predicted (Fig. 4b,c). As dips only appear when the factor is expressed, they also support the identity of the trans-acting TF.
To validate that predicted causal motifs contribute to enhancer activity, we used luciferase reporters. Our model implicated HNF regulators as activators of HepG2-specific enhancers (Fig. 3), and context-specific dips supported binding interactions (Fig. 4c). We thus selected for functional analysis 10 sites with HNF motifs showing dips in strong HepG2-specific enhancers, and evaluated them with and without the HNF motif. We found that permutation of the motif consistently led to a reduction in enhancer activity (Fig. 4d), supporting its predicted causal role.
Assigning candidate regulatory functions to disease-associated variants
Finally, we explored whether our chromatin annotations and regulatory predictions can provide insight into sequence variants associated with disease phenotypes. To that effect, we gathered a large set of non-coding SNPs from GWAS catalogs, an exceedingly small proportion of which are currently understood37.
We found that disease-associated SNPs are significantly more likely to coincide with strong enhancers (states 4,5; 2-fold enrichment, p<10−10), despite the fact that no notable association to these states are seen for SNPs in general or for those SNPs tested in the studies. To test whether SNPs associated with a particular disease might have even more specific correspondences, we examined 426 GWAS datasets. We identified 10 studies38-47 whose variants showed significant correspondences to cell type-specific strong enhancer states (see Methods; Fig. 5a).
Individual variants from these studies were strongly enriched in enhancer states specifically active in relevant cell types (Fig. 5a,b). For example, SNPs associated with erythrocyte phenotypes38 were found in erythroleukemia cell (K562) enhancers, SNPs associated with systemic lupus erythematosus39 were found in lymphoblastoid cell (GM12878) enhancers, while SNPs associated with triglyceride40 phenotypes or blood lipid phenotypes41 were found in hepatocellular carcinoma cell (HepG2) enhancers. We also applied our model to chromatin data for T-cells3 (Supplementary Fig. 19), for which strong enhancer states correlated to variants associated with risk of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia48, further validating our approach.
We also used our predicted enhancer-target gene associations to find candidate downstream genes whose expression might be affected by cis-changes occurring in the enhancer region. Although most of the predicted target genes are proximal to the enhancer, a subset of more distal predicted targets could reflect novel candidates for the disease phenotypes (Fig. 5b).
In addition, we identified several instances where a lead GWAS variant does not correspond to a particular chromatin element but a linked variant coincides with an enhancer with the predicted cell type-specificity (Fig. 5c). Thus, chromatin profiles may provide a general means to triage variants within a haplotype block, a common problem faced in GWAS.
Lastly, we identified several cases in which a disease-associated SNP created or disrupted a regulatory motif instance for a predicted causal TF in the relevant cell type (Fig. 5d), suggesting a specific molecular mechanism by which the disease-associated genotype could lead to the observed disease phenotype consistent with our regulatory predictions.
Discussion
Our work provides a systematic view of many chromatin marks across many cell types, demonstrating the power of chromatin profiling as an additional and dynamic layer of genome annotation. We presented methods to distinguish different classes of functional elements, elucidate their cell type-specificities, and reveal cis-regulatory interactions that govern them and ultimately drive target gene expression. By intersecting our predictions with non-coding SNPs from GWAS datasets, we propose potential mechanistic explanations for disease variants, either through their presence within cell type-specific enhancer states, or by their effect on binding motifs for predicted regulators.
Chromatin states dramatically reduced the large combinatorial space of 90 chromatin datasets (2^90 combinations) into a manageable set of biologically-interpretable annotations, thus providing an efficient and robust way to track coordinated changes across cell types. This enabled the systematic identification and comparison of >100 thousand promoter and enhancer elements. Both types of elements are cell type-specific, associated with motif enrichments, and assume strong, weak and poised states that correlate with neighboring gene expression and function. Enhancers showed exquisite tissue-specificity, enrichment in the vicinity of developmental and cell type-specific genes, and predictive power for proximal gene expression, reinforcing their roles as sentinels of tissue-specific gene expression49. By elucidating enhancers systematically, and linking them to upstream regulators and downstream genes, our analysis can help provide a missing link between regulators and target genes. The power of the approach should increase considerably as additional phenotypically-distinct cell types are surveyed, and enable a greater proportion of enhancer elements to be incorporated into the connectivity network.
The inferred cis-regulatory interactions make specific testable predictions, many of which were confirmed through additional experiments and analyses. Our enhancer-target gene linkages are supported by cis-regulatory inferences from QTL mapping studies. Predicted TF-motif interactions within cell type-specific enhancers were confirmed in specific cases by TF binding and more generally by depletions in the chromatin profiles at causal motifs in appropriate cellular contexts. Motifs predicted as causal regulators of cell type-specific enhancers were also confirmed in enhancer assays.
The regulatory inferences afforded by multi-cell chromatin profiles are unique and highly complementary to datasets for TF binding, expression, chromatin accessibility, nucleosome positioning, and chromosome conformation50. For example, our regulatory predictions can help focus the spectrum of TF binding events to a smaller number of functional interactions. The chromatin-centric approach also complements the extensive body of work on biological network inference from expression data with the potential to introduce enhancers and other genomic elements into connectivity networks.
Our study has important implications for the understanding of disease. Our detailed and dynamic functional annotations of the relatively uncharted non-coding genome can facilitate the interpretation of GWAS datasets by predicting specific cell types and regulators related to specific diseases and phenotypes. Furthermore, the connections derived for enhancer regions, to upstream regulators and downstream genes, propose cis- and trans-acting interactions that may be modulated by the sequence variants. While the current study represents only a first small step in this direction, we expect that future iterations with greater diversity of cell types and improved methodologies will help define the molecular underpinnings of human disease.
Methods Summary
ChIP-seq analysis was performed in biological replicate as described4 using antibodies validated by Western blots and peptide competitions. ChIP DNA and input controls were sequenced using the Illumina Genome Analyzer. Expression profiles were acquired using Affymetrix GeneChip arrays. Chromatin states were learned jointly by applying an HMM8 to 10 data tracks for each of the 9 cell types. We focused on a 15 state model that provides sufficient resolution to resolve biologically-meaningful patterns yet is reproducible across cell types when independently processed. We used this model to produce 9 genome-wide chromatin state annotations, which were validated by additional ChIP experiments and reporter assays. Multi-cell type clustering was conducted on locations assigned to strong promoter state 1 (or strong enhancer state 4) in at least one cell type using the k-means algorithm. Enhancer-target gene linkages were predicted by correlating normalized signal intensities of H3K27ac, H3K4me1 and H3K4me2 with gene expression across cell types as a function of distance to the TSS. Upstream regulators were predicted using a set of known TF motifs assembled from multiple sources. Motif instances were identified by sequence match and evolutionary conservation. P-values for GWAS studies were based on randomizing the location of SNPs, and the FDR based on randomizing the assignment of SNPs across studies. Datasets are available from the ENCODE website (http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE), the supporting website for this paper (http://compbio.mit.edu/ENCODE_chromatin_states), and the Gene Expression Omnibus (GSE26386).
Supplementary Material
Appendix
Methods
Cell culture
Human H1 ES cells were cultured in TeSR media51 on Matrigel by Cellular Dynamics International. Cells were split with dispase and harvested at a passage number between 30 and 40. Prior to harvest, cells were karyotyped and stained for Oct4 to confirm pluripotency. K562 erythrocytic leukemia cells (ATCC CCL-243, lot # 4607240) were grown in suspension in RPMI medium (HyClone SH30022.02) with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1% Antibiotic - Antimycotic (GIBCO 15240-062). Cell density was maintained between 3 × 105 and 7 × 105 cells/ml. GM12878 B-lymphoblastoid cells (Coriell Cell Repositories, “expansion A”) were grown in suspension in RPMI 1640 medium with 15% FBS (not heat inactivated), 2 mM L-glutamine and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Cells were seeded at a concentration of ~2 × 105 viable cells/ml with minimal disruption, and maintained between 3 × 105 and 7 × 105 cells/ml. HepG2 hepatocellular carcinoma cells (ATCC HB-8065, lot# 4968519) were cultured in DMEM (HyClone SH30022.02) with 10% FBS and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Cells were trypsinized, resuspended to single cell suspension, split to a confluence between 15 and 20% and then harvested at ~75% confluence. NHEK normal human epidermal keratinocytes isolated from skin (Lonza CC-2501, lot# 4F1155J, passage 1) were grown in keratinocyte basal medium 2 (KGM-2 BulletKit, Lonza) supplemented with BPE, hEGF, hydrocortisone, GA-1000, transferrin, epinephrine and insulin. Cells were seeded at recommended density (3500 cells/cm2), subjected to two to three passages on polystyrene tissue culture plates and harvested at a confluence of 70 to 80%. HSMM primary human skeletal muscle myoblasts (Lonza CC-2580, lot#6F4444, passage 2) were cultured in Smooth Muscle Growth Medium-2 (SkGM-2 BulletKit, Lonza) supplemented with rhEGF, dexamethasone, L-glutamine, FBS, and GA-1000. Cells were seeded at recommended density (3500 cells/cm2), subjected to two to three passages, and harvested at a confluence of 50 to 70%. NHLF primary normal human lung fibroblasts (Lonza CC-2512, lot#4F0758, passage 2) were grown in Fibroblast Cell Basal Medium 2 (FGM-2 BulletKit, Lonza) supplemented with hFGF-β, insulin, FBS and GA-100. Cells were seeded at recommended density (2500 cells/cm2), subjected to two to three passages, and harvested at an approximate confluence of 80%. HUVEC primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (Lonza CC-2517, lot# 7F3239, passage 1) were grown in endothelial basal medium 2 (EGM-2 BulletKit, Lonza) supplemented with hFGF-β, hydrocortisone, VEGF, R3-IGF-1, ascorbic acid, heparin, FBS, hEGF and GA-1000. Cells were seeded at recommended density (2500 – 5000 cells/cm2), subjected to two to three passages, and harvested at a confluence of 70 to 80%. HMEC primary human mammary epithelial cells from mammary reduction tissue (Lonza CC-2551, passage 7) were grown in mammary epithelia basal medium (MEGM BulletKit, Lonza) supplemented with hEGF-β, hydrocortisone, BPE, GA-1000 and insulin. Cells were seeded as recommended density (2500 cells/cm2), subjected two to three passages and harvested at 60 to 80% confluence.
Antibodies
ChIP assays were performed using the following antibody reagents: H3K4me1 (Abcam ab8895, lot 38311/659352), H3K4me2 (Abcam ab7766, lot 56293), H3K4me3 (Abcam ab8580, lot 331024; Milipore 04-473, lot DAM1623866), H3K9ac (Abcam ab44441, lot 455103/550799), H3K27ac (Abcam ab4729, lot 31456), H3K36me3 (Abcam ab9050, lot 136353), H4K20me1 (Abcam ab9051, lot 104513/519198), H3K27me3 (Millipore 07-449, lot DAM1387952/DAM1514011), CTCF (Millipore 07-729, lot 1350637), H3K9me3 (Abcam ab8898, lot 484088), H2A.Z (Millipore 07-594, lot DAM1504736) and RNAPII N-terminus (Santa Cruz sc-899X, lot H0510). All antibody lots were extensively validated for specificity and efficacy in ChIP-seq. Western blots were used to confirm specific recognition of histone protein (or CTCF). Dot plots performed using arrayed histone tail peptides representing various modification states were used to confirm specificity for the appropriate modification. ChIP-seq assays performed on a common cell reagent were used to confirm consistency between different lots of the same antibody.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)
Cells were harvested by cross-linking with 1% formaldehyde in cell culture medium for 10 min at 37 °C. After quenching with the addition of 125 mM glycine for 5 min at 37 °C, the cells were washed twice with cold PBS containing protease inhibitor (Roche). After aspiration of all liquid, pellets consisting of ~107 cells were flash frozen and stored at −80°C. Fixed cells were thawed and sonicated to obtain chromatin fragments of ~200 to 700 bp using a Bioruptor (Diagenode). Immunoprecipitations were performed as described, retaining a fraction of input ‘whole cell extract’ (WCE) as a control4. Briefly, sonicated chromatin was diluted 10-fold and incubated with ~5 μg antibody overnight. Antibody–chromatin complexes were pulled-down using protein A-sepharose, washed and then eluted. After cross-link reversal and proteinase K treatment, immunoprecipitated DNA was extracted with phenol, precipitated in ethanol, and treated with RNase. ChIP DNA was quantified by fluorometry using the Qubit assay (Invitrogen).
Next-generation sequencing
For each ChIP or control sample, ~5 ng of DNA was used to generate a standard Illumina sequencing library. Briefly, DNA fragments were end-repaired using the End-It DNA End-Repair Kit (Epicentre), extended with a 3′ ‘A’ base using Klenow (3′→5′ exo-, 0.3 U/μl, NEB), ligated to standard Illumina adapters (75 bp with a ‘T’ overhang) using DNA ligase (0.05 U/μl, NEB), gel purified on 2% agarose, retaining products between 275 and 700 bp, and subjected to 18 PCR cycles. These libraries were quantified by fluorometry and evaluated by quantitative PCR or a multiplexed digital hybridization-based analysis (NanoString nCounter)52 to confirm representation and specific enrichment of DNA species. Libraries were sequenced in one or two lanes on the Illumina Genome Analyzer using standard procedures for cluster amplification and sequencing-by-synthesis.
Expression profiling
Cytosolic RNA was isolated using RNeasy Columns (Qiagen) from the same cell lots as above. Gene expression profiles were acquired using Affymetrix GeneChip arrays. The data were normalized using the GenePattern expression data analysis package53. CEL files were processed by RMA, quantile normalization and background correction. Two replicate expression datasets for each cell type were averaged and log2 transformed. Gene level normalization across cell types was computed by mean normalization.
Primary processing of sequencing reads
ChIP-seq reads were aligned to human genome build HG18 with Maq (http://maq.sourceforge.net/maqman.shtml) using default parameters. All reads were truncated to 36 bases before alignment. Signal density maps for visualization were derived by extending sequencing reads by 200 bp in the 3′ direction (the estimated median size of ChIP fragments), and then counting the total number of overlapping reads at 25 bp intervals. Replicate ChIP-seq experiments were verified by comparing enriched intervals as described4, and then combined into a single dataset. For the HMM, density maps were derived by extending sequencing reads by 200 bp in the 3′ direction and then assigning them to a single 200 bp window based on the midpoint of the extended read. These maps were then binarized at a 200 bp resolution based on a Poisson background model using a threshold of 10−4.
Joint learning of HMM states across cell types
To handle data from the 9 cell types, we concatenated their genomes to create an extended virtual genome that we used to train the HMM. We applied the model to ten tracks corresponding to the different chromatin marks and input using a multivariate HMM-model as described8. Here, we used a Euclidean distance for determining initial parameters for the nested initialization step. After learning and evaluating a set of roughly nested models, considering up to 25 states, we focused on a 15 state model that provides sufficient resolution to resolve biologically-meaningful chromatin patterns and yet is highly reproducible across cell types when independently processed (Supplementary Fig. 7). We used this model to compute the probability that each location is in a given state, and then assigned each 200 bp interval to its most likely state for each cell type. Even though our model focuses on presence/absence frequencies of marks, we found that our states also capture signal intensity differences between high-frequency and low-frequency marks (Supplementary Fig. 9).
Enrichment analysis
For each state, enrichments for different annotations were computed at 200 bp resolution, with the exception of conservation which was computed at nucleotide resolution. We used annotations obtained through the UCSC Genome Browser54 for RefSeq TSSs and transcribed regions55, PhastCons56, DNase-seq for K562 cells12, c-Myc ChIP-seq for K562 cells13, NF-κB ChIP-seq for GM1287814, Oct4 in ES cells24 and nuclear lamina15. Gene functional group enrichments were determined using STEM57 and biological process annotations in the Gene Ontology database58. P-values were calculated based on hypergeometric distribution and corrected for multiple testing using Bonferonni correction.
Comparing chromatin state assignments between cell types
For each pair of cell types, the chromatin state assignments at each genomic position were compared. We calculated the frequency with which each pair of states occurred, and normalized this against the expected frequency based on the amount of genome covered by each state. The fold-enrichments in Figure 2a reflect an aggregation across all 72 possible pairs of cell types.
Pair-wise promoter clustering
Promoters for RefSeq genes were clustered based on the most likely chromatin state assignment across a 2 kb region centered on the TSS. Clustering was performed jointly across GM12878 and HSMM, and was restricted to genes with corresponding Affymetrix expression. Briefly, each promoter was treated as a 330 element binary vector where each position of the vector corresponded to a position along the promoter, cell type and state. Clustering was performed on these vectors by k-means in Matlab. Gene expression values were calculated based on the corresponding Affymetrix probe set closest to the TSS.
Multi-cell type promoter and enhancer clustering
Promoter state clustering was performed for all 200 bp intervals assigned to the strong promoter state (state 1) in at least one cell type. Each interval was represented by a single vector corresponding to the estimated probabilities that it is in the strong promoter state for each of the 9 cell types, accounting for model assignment uncertainty and biological noise. These were determined from the model posterior probabilities of state assignments and a comparison of state assignments in replicate experimental data. Clustering was performed by k-means using Matlab. We found that 20 clusters provided sufficient resolution to distinguish major cell type-specific patterns. Enhancer state clustering was performed for all 200 bp intervals assigned to strong enhancer state 4 in at least one cell type using identical procedures. For the purposes of display in Figure 2, the locations were randomly down-sampled. For the purpose of identifying enriched functional gene categories in Figure 2b, enhancers were linked to the nearest TSS up to 50 kb distant excluding those within 5kb. Enhancer-gene correspondences based on the nearest gene were used for the expression analysis of distance based linked genes in Figure 3b.
Linking enhancer locations to correlated genes
To predict linkages between enhancer states and target genes, we combined distance-based information with correlation across cell types of gene expression levels with read-depth normalized signal intensity of three histone modifications associated with enhancer states: H3K4me1, H3K4me2 and H3K27ac. For each enhancer state (4-7), cell type, and 200bp interval between 5kb and 125kb from the TSS, we trained logistic regression classifiers. The classifiers were trained to use mark intensity-expression correlation values to distinguish real instances of pairs of enhancer states and gene expression values from control pairs based on randomly re-assigning expression values to different genes. To learn a smooth and robust function at each position we included as part of the training all enhancer state assignments within a 10kb window centered at the position. The link score for a specific enhancer-gene linkage was defined as the ratio of the corresponding logistic regression classifier probability score to that for the randomized data.
For the evaluation of the expression quantitative trait loci (QTL) analysis we used a link score of 2.5. The eQTL data was obtained from the University of Chicago QTL browser (http://eqtl.uchicago.edu/cgibin/gbrowse/eqtl/). In the QTL evaluation for each SNP that overlapped a strong enhancer state (4 or 5) and was within 125kb of a TSS excluding locations within 5kb and was associated with a gene for which we had expression data was considered eligible to be supported by our linked predictions. We computed the fraction we observed linked based on our linked predictions relative to the fraction that would be expected to be linked conditioned on knowing the distance distributions of the SNPs relative to the gene TSS.
For the evaluation of linked predictions using the Gene Ontology we use the same link score and the same distance relative to the TSS used to define genes associated with clusters. The base set of genes in the enrichment analysis here were all genes which could be linked in at least one cluster.
Motif and TF analysis
A database of known TF motifs was collated by combining motifs from TRANSFAC (version 11.3)59, Jaspar (2010-05-07)60 and protein binding microarray datasets61-63. Motif instances in non-coding and non-repetitive regions of the genome were identified using these motifs and sequence conservation using a 29-way alignment of Eutherian mammal genomes (Lindblad-Toh et al, in preparation). These were filtered using a significance threshold of p<4−8 for the motifs64, and confidence level based on conservation. Motifs were linked to corresponding TFs using metadata provided by the source. Motif enrichments for chromatin state clusters were computed as ratios to the instances of shuffled motifs, in order to correct for non-specific conservation and composition. A confidence interval was calculated for each ratio using Wilson score intervals (z=1.5), selecting the most conservative value within the confidence interval. In cases where multiple motif variants were available for the same TF, the one that showed the most variance in enrichment across clusters was selected.
For predicting causal activators and repressors, motif scores and TF expression scores were correlated as follows. Motif scores were calculated as described above. TF expression scores were calculated for each cluster by correlating the expression of the TF across the cell types with the activity profile of the enhancers in that cluster (defined by the cluster means from the k-means clustering). The motif scores and the TF expression scores were then correlated against each other to identify positively- and negatively-correlated TFs.
TF-motif interactions predicted for strong enhancer states in specific cell types were validated by using the raw ChIP-seq tag enrichments as proxy for nucleosome positioning. For this purpose, sequencing reads were processed as above, except that the middle 75 bp of inferred ChIP fragments were used to derive signal density informative of nucleosome-depletion (dips), as described36. Superposition plots show tag enrichments relative to a uniform background computed based on sequencing depth.
Quantitative real-time PCR
Enrichment ratios for RNAPII and H2A.Z ChIPs were determined relative to input chromatin by quantitative real-time PCR using an ABI 7900 detection system, in biological replicate as described previously65. Regions used for validation correspond to 3 different chromatin states, including 13 for state 1 (arbitrarily selected), 11 for state 4 (arbitrarily selected but excluding regions within 2 kb of a state 1 annotation) and 11 for state 7 (arbitrarily selected but excluding regions within 2 kb of a state 1 or state 4 annotation). PCR primers are listed in Supplementary Data 1.
Functional enhancer assays
The SV40 promoter was first inserted between the HindIII and NcoI sites of pGL4.10 (Promega). Next, 250bp sequences from the reference genome (hg18) corresponding to different chromatin states (8 from HepG2 state 4, 7 from HepG2 state 7, and 7 from GM12878 state 4) were synthesized (GenScript) and then inserted between the two SfiI sites upstream of the SV40 promoter. HepG2 cells were seeded into 96 well plates at a density of 5×10^4 cells/well and expanded overnight to ~50% confluency. The cells were then transfected with 400 ng of a pGL4.10-derived plasmid and 100 ng of pGL4.73 (Promega) using Lipofectamine LTX. Firefly and Renilla luciferase activities were measured 24 hr post transfection using Dual-Glow (Promega) and an EnVision 2103 multilabel reader (PerkinElmer) from triplicate experiments. Data are reported as light units relative to a control plasmid. For validation of causal TF motifs, 10 sequences of 250 bp corresponding to HepG2-specific strong enhancers (state 4) with dips and HNF motifs were tested as above, and compared to identical sequences except with the HNF motif permuted. Tested enhancer elements are listed in Supplementary Data 1.
GWAS SNP Analysis
The GWAS variants and SNP coordinates were obtained from the NHGRI catalog and the UCSC browser (October 30, 2010)37,54. This set was refined by extending the blood lipid GWAS41 set to contain all reported SNPs, and by bifurcating the hematological and biochemical traits study46 into a hematological traits set and a biochemical traits set. We limited our analysis to studies reporting 2 or more associated SNPs. The variants from each study were intersected with chromatin states from each of the cell types. The reported p-values were based on the overlap of associated SNPs with strong enhancer states 4 and 5. We controlled for non-independence between proximal SNPs based on a randomization test where SNPs were randomly shifted while preserving relative distance. We then defined an estimated false discovery rate based on permutations in which SNPs were randomly re-assigned to different studies, and recomputed corrected p-values. Estimates of false discovery rates based on these permutations control for multiple testing of studies and cell types and for general non-specific enrichments for states 4 and 5 with GWAS hits. Candidate gene targets were predicted for a subset of variants associated with enhancer states based on the lead cell type using the linking method described above.
References
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
We thank members of the Epigenomics community at the Broad Institute and the Bernstein and Kellis laboratories for helpful discussions and criticisms. We also thank Mario Suva, Eric Mendenhall and Shawn Gillespie for assistance with experiments, and Loyal Goff and Andrew Chess for critical reading of the manuscript. We acknowledge the Broad Institute Genome Sequencing Platform for their expertise and assistance with data production. This research was supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute under an ENCODE grant (U54 HG004570), R01 HG004037, RC1 HG005334, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and the National Science Foundation (awards 0644282 and 0905968), and the Sloan Foundation.
References
- 1. Identification and analysis of functional elements in 1% of the human genome by the ENCODE pilot projectNature2007447799816[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 2. Transcriptional regulatory circuits: predicting numbers from alphabetsScience2009325429432[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 3. High-resolution profiling of histone methylations in the human genomeCell2007129823837[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 4. Genome-wide maps of chromatin state in pluripotent and lineage-committed cellsNature2007448553560[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 5. A chromatin landmark and transcription initiation at most promoters in human cellsCell20071307788[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 6. Distinct and predictive chromatin signatures of transcriptional promoters and enhancers in the human genomeNat Genet200739311318[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 7. Discovery and annotation of functional chromatin signatures in the human genomePLoS Comput Biol20095e1000566[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 8. Discovery and characterization of chromatin states for systematic annotation of the human genomeNat Biotechnol201028817825[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 9. Genomic maps and comparative analysis of histone modifications in human and mouseCell2005120169181[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 10. Histone modifications at human enhancers reflect global cell-type-specific gene expressionNature2009[Google Scholar]
- 11. CTCF: master weaver of the genomeCell200913711941211[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 12. Sequencing newly replicated DNA reveals widespread plasticity in human replication timingProc Natl Acad Sci U S A2010107139144[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 13. Close association of RNA polymerase II and many transcription factors with Pol III genesProc Natl Acad Sci U S A201010736393644[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 14. Variation in transcription factor binding among humansScience2010328232235[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 15. Domain organization of human chromosomes revealed by mapping of nuclear lamina interactionsNature2008453948951[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 16. Stem cells, the molecular circuitry of pluripotency and nuclear reprogrammingCell2008132567582[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 17. A large fraction of extragenic RNA pol II transcription sites overlap enhancersPLoS Biol20108e1000384[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 18. Widespread transcription at neuronal activity-regulated enhancersNature2010465182187[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 19. Histone variants--ancient wrap artists of the epigenomeNat Rev Mol Cell Biol201011264275[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 20. Mapping the genetic architecture of gene expression in human liverPLoS Biol20086e107[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 21. Understanding mechanisms underlying human gene expression variation with RNA sequencingNature2010464768772[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 22. Transcriptome genetics using second generation sequencing in a Caucasian populationNature2010464773777[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 23. High-resolution mapping of expression-QTLs yields insight into human gene regulationPLoS Genet20084e1000214[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 24. Transposable elements have rewired the core regulatory network of human embryonic stem cellsNat Genet201042631634[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 25. Discovering hematopoietic mechanisms through genome-wide analysis of GATA factor chromatin occupancyMol Cell200936667681[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 26. Liver development update: new embryo models, cell lineage control, and morphogenesisCurr Opin Genet Dev200414582590[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 27. The molecular regulation of myogenesisClin Genet2000571625[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 28. Mouse models in the study of the Ets family of transcription factorsOncogene20001964436454[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 29. Mutational inactivation of the p53 gene in the human erythroid leukemic K562 cell lineLeuk Res19931710451050[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 30. MDM2-dependent inhibition of p53 is required for Epstein-Barr virus B-cell growth transformation and infected-cell survivalJ Virol20098324912499[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 31. Nuclear accumulation and activation of p53 in embryonic stem cells after DNA damageBMC Cell Biol20091046[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 32. Unbiased mapping of transcription factor binding sites along human chromosomes 21 and 22 points to widespread regulation of noncoding RNAsCell2004116499509[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 33. A global map of p53 transcription-factor binding sites in the human genomeCell2006124207219[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 34. Co-repressor SMRT and class II histone deacetylases promote Bach2 nuclear retention and formation of nuclear foci that are responsible for local transcriptional repressionJ Biochem2007141719727[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 35. Gfi1b alters histone methylation at target gene promoters and sites of gamma-satellite containing heterochromatinEMBO J20062524092419[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 36. Nucleosome dynamics define transcriptional enhancersNat Genet201042343347[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 37. Potential etiologic and functional implications of genome-wide association loci for human diseases and traitsProc Natl Acad Sci U S A200910693629367[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 38. Multiple loci influence erythrocyte phenotypes in the CHARGE ConsortiumNat Genet20094111911198[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 39. Genome-wide association study in a Chinese Han population identifies nine new susceptibility loci for systemic lupus erythematosusNat Genet20094112341237[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 40. Six new loci associated with blood low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol or triglycerides in humansNat Genet200840189197[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 41. Biological, clinical and population relevance of 95 loci for blood lipidsNature2010466707713[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 42. Meta-analysis of genome-wide association data identifies four new susceptibility loci for colorectal cancerNat Genet20084014261435[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 43. Genome-wide association study identifies eight loci associated with blood pressureNat Genet2009[Google Scholar]
- 44. Genome-wide association study meta-analysis identifies seven new rheumatoid arthritis risk lociNat Genet201042508514[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 45. Genome-wide meta-analyses identify three loci associated with primary biliary cirrhosisNat Genet201042658660[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 46. Genome-wide association study of hematological and biochemical traits in a Japanese populationNat Genet201042210215[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 47. A genome-wide meta-analysis identifies 22 loci associated with eight hematological parameters in the HaemGen consortiumNat Genet20094111821190[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 48. Loci on 7p12.2, 10q21.2 and 14q11.2 are associated with risk of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemiaNat Genet20094110061010[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 49. Genomic views of distant-acting enhancersNature2009461199205[PubMed][Google Scholar]
- 50. Integrating one-dimensional and three-dimensional maps of genomesJ Cell Sci201012319791988[PubMed][Google Scholar]