Transcriptional responses of cancer cells to heat shock-inducing stimuli involve amplification of robust HSF1 binding
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Nature Communications
Abstract
Responses of cells to stimuli are increasingly discovered to involve the binding
of sequence-specific transcription factors outside of known target genes. We
wanted to determine to what extent the genome-wide binding and function of
A transcription factor is shaped by the cell type versus the stimulus. To do so,
we induced the Heat Shock Response pathway in two different cancer cell lines
with two different stimuli and related the binding of its master regulator, HSF1
to nascent RNA and chromatin accessibility. Here, we show that HSF1 binding
patterns retain their identity between basal conditions and under different
magnitudes of activation, so that common HSF1 binding is globally associated
with distinct transcription outcomes. HSF1-induced increase in DNA accessibility was modest in scale but occurred predominantly at remote genomic
sites. Apart from regulating transcription at existing elements, including promoters and enhancers, HSF1 binding amplified during responses to stimuli
may engage inactive chromatin.
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Research Article
