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A tissue dissociation method for ATAC-seq and CUT&RUN in Drosophila pupal tissues.


ABSTRACT: Chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, and transcription factor binding are highly dynamic during Drosophila metamorphosis and drive global changes in gene expression as larval tissues differentiate into adult structures. Unfortunately, the presence of pupa cuticle on many Drosophila tissues during metamorphosis prevents enzyme access to cells and has limited the use of enzymatic in situ methods for assessing chromatin accessibility and histone modifications. Here, we present a dissociation method for cuticle-bound pupal tissues that is compatible for use with ATAC-Seq and CUT&RUN to interrogate chromatin accessibility and histone modifications. We show this method provides comparable chromatin accessibility data to the non-enzymatic approach FAIRE-seq, with only a fraction of the amount of input tissue required. This approach is also compatible with CUT&RUN, which allows genome-wide mapping of histone modifications with less than 1/10th of the tissue input required for more conventional approaches such as Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Sequencing (ChIP-seq). Our protocol makes it possible to use newer, more sensitive enzymatic in situ approaches to interrogate gene regulatory networks during Drosophila metamorphosis.

SUBMITTER: Buchert EM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10208176 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A tissue dissociation method for ATAC-seq and CUT&RUN in <i>Drosophila</i> pupal tissues.

Buchert Elli M EM   Fogarty Elizabeth A EA   Uyehara Christopher M CM   McKay Daniel J DJ   Buttitta Laura A LA  

Fly 20231201 1


Chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, and transcription factor binding are highly dynamic during <i>Drosophila</i> metamorphosis and drive global changes in gene expression as larval tissues differentiate into adult structures. Unfortunately, the presence of pupa cuticle on many <i>Drosophila</i> tissues during metamorphosis prevents enzyme access to cells and has limited the use of enzymatic in situ methods for assessing chromatin accessibility and histone modifications. Here, we pres  ...[more]

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