Diverse Roles of Arabidopsis ROS1 in Regulating Chromatin Accessibility and DNA Methylation [ChIP-seq]
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ABSTRACT: Over two decades after the discovery of ROS1 as the first eukaryotic DNA demethylase, its genome-wide binding sites and functions beyond active DNA demethylation remain unknown. Here, using advanced ChIP-seq, we reveal that ROS1 specifically occupies nearly all accessible chromatin and dynamically correlates with changes in chromatin accessibility across tissues, establishing it as a marker of accessible chromatin. Furthermore, we demonstrate that ROS1 maintains DNA hypomethylation through an occupancy-based mechanism that prevents the recruitment of RNA-directed DNA methylation, distinct from its active DNA demethylation. Additionally, ROS1 plays a regulatory role in chromatin accessibility, both independently and in cooperation with other epigenetic regulators. This regulation occurs in both DNA methylation-dependent and independent contexts, with ROS1 functioning as a potential or actual protector of accessible chromatin, depending on the presence and targeting of DNA methylation systems. Our results provide a comprehensive understanding of the regulatory roles of ROS1 in chromatin accessibility and DNA methylation, highlighting the intricate crosstalk between these mechanisms.
ORGANISM(S): Arabidopsis thaliana Brassica napus
PROVIDER: GSE282071 | GEO | 2026/02/06
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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