Pluto Bioinformatics

GSE55581: Diet-induced chromatin remodeling in mice livers

Bulk RNA sequencing

The tissue-specific packaging of the genome into the nucleus through chromatin is fundamentally involved in gene regulation, and aberrant modifications to chromatin are a hallmark of many diseases. We show here that a high fat (HF) diet leads to substantial chromatin remodeling in the livers of C57BL/6J mice, as compared to mice fed a control diet. Regions of the genome that display the greatest variation in chromatin accessibility between HF and control regions are targeted by transcription factors with known roles in the liver including HNF4, CEBP/, and FOXA1. Whereas livers of DBA/2J mice fed a HF or control diet also demonstrate diet-induced chromatin remodeling, the regions displaying the greatest variation are largely distinct from those observed in B6 livers, indicating a crosstalk between genetic and epigenetic components in determining how diet-induced chromatin remodeling is associated with metabolic disease progression. SOURCE: Amy LeungNatarajan, Schones Beckman Research Institute, City of Hope

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