Mapping Dynamic Histone Acetylation Patterns to Gene Expression in Nanog-depleted Murine Embryonic Stem Cells
Florian Markowetz, Klaas W Mulder, Edoardo M Airoldi, Ihor R, Lemischka, Olga G Troyanskaya

TL;DR
This study investigates how dynamic patterns of histone acetylation influence gene expression during early differentiation of murine embryonic stem cells, revealing increasing correlation over time and complex regulatory relationships.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of genome-wide histone acetylation and gene expression dynamics in ESC differentiation, highlighting the predictive relationship and specific changes in pluripotency-related genes.
Findings
Histone acetylation changes correlate with gene expression alterations.
Correlation between acetylation and expression increases over differentiation time.
ESC-specific genes show more acetylation and a stronger decrease over time.
Abstract
Embryonic stem cells (ESC) have the potential to self-renew indefinitely and to differentiate into any of the three germ layers. The molecular mechanisms for self-renewal, maintenance of pluripotency and lineage specification are poorly understood, but recent results point to a key role for epigenetic mechanisms. In this study, we focus on quantifying the impact of histone 3 acetylation (H3K9,14ac) on gene expression in murine embryonic stem cells. We analyze genome-wide histone acetylation patterns and gene expression profiles measured over the first five days of cell differentiation triggered by silencing Nanog, a key transcription factor in ESC regulation. We explore the temporal and spatial dynamics of histone acetylation data and its correlation with gene expression using supervised and unsupervised statistical models. On a genome-wide scale, changes in acetylation are…
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