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Non-canonical protein-DNA interactions identified by ChIP are not artifacts

BACKGROUND: ChIP-chip and ChIP-seq are widely used methods to map protein-DNA interactions on a genomic scale in vivo. Waldminghaus and Skarstad recently reported, in this journal, a modified method for ChIP-chip. Based on a comparison of our previously-published ChIP-chip data for Escherichia coli...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bonocora, Richard P, Fitzgerald, Devon M, Stringer, Anne M, Wade, Joseph T
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3738151/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23586855
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-14-254
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: ChIP-chip and ChIP-seq are widely used methods to map protein-DNA interactions on a genomic scale in vivo. Waldminghaus and Skarstad recently reported, in this journal, a modified method for ChIP-chip. Based on a comparison of our previously-published ChIP-chip data for Escherichia coli σ(32) with their own data, Waldminghaus and Skarstad concluded that many of the σ(32) targets identified in our earlier work are false positives. In particular, we identified many non-canonical σ(32) targets that are located inside genes or are associated with genes that show no detectable regulation by σ(32). Waldminghaus and Skarstad propose that such non-canonical sites are artifacts, identified due to flaws in the standard ChIP methodology. Waldminghaus and Skarstad suggest specific changes to the standard ChIP procedure that reportedly eliminate the claimed artifacts. RESULTS: We reanalyzed our published ChIP-chip datasets for σ(32) and the datasets generated by Waldminghaus and Skarstad to assess data quality and reproducibility. We also performed targeted ChIP/qPCR for σ(32) and an unrelated transcription factor, AraC, using the standard ChIP method and the modified ChIP method proposed by Waldminghaus and Skarstad. Furthermore, we determined the association of core RNA polymerase with disputed σ(32) promoters, with and without overexpression of σ(32). We show that (i) our published σ(32) ChIP-chip datasets have a consistently higher dynamic range than those of Waldminghaus and Skarstad, (ii) our published σ(32) ChIP-chip datasets are highly reproducible, whereas those of Waldminghaus and Skarstad are not, (iii) non-canonical σ(32) target regions are enriched in a σ(32) ChIP in a heat shock-dependent manner, regardless of the ChIP method used, (iv) association of core RNA polymerase with some disputed σ(32) target genes is induced by overexpression of σ(32), (v) σ(32) targets disputed by Waldminghaus and Skarstad are predominantly those that are most weakly bound, and (vi) the modifications to the ChIP method proposed by Waldminghaus and Skarstad reduce enrichment of all protein-bound genomic regions. CONCLUSIONS: The modifications to the ChIP-chip method suggested by Waldminghaus and Skarstad reduce rather than increase the quality of ChIP data. Hence, the non-canonical σ(32) targets identified in our previous study are likely to be genuine. We propose that the failure of Waldminghaus and Skarstad to identify many of these σ(32) targets is due predominantly to the lower data quality in their study. We conclude that surprising ChIP-chip results are not artifacts to be ignored, but rather indications that our understanding of DNA-binding proteins is incomplete.