Overview
Animal genomes undergo a period of intense reorganization during early development as zygotic transcription initiates and embryos transition from a totipotent to a lineage-committed state. This reorganization is reflected by dramatic changes in chromatin structure and in the DNA and histone modifications that help drive this structure. During the last two decades, zebrafish have become an important and established model for studying chromatin in the context of vertebrate development. Two recent comprehensive reviews detail the many seminal insights into chromatin regulation that have been obtained using zebrafish 1, 2. This focused review highlights current advances in our understanding of chromatin dynamics during early zebrafish embryogenesis. We provide an emerging picture of chromatin changes during the awakening of the zebrafish zygotic genome, integrate this knowledge with new data gained from other species, and highlight research directions where the strengths of the zebrafish model provide high potential for new advances.
Zebrafish
Zebrafish offer a powerful system for studying chromatin transitions associated with early development. External fertilization means that embryos are accessible for observation, manipulation, and molecular interrogation from the 1-cell stage onward without surgical intervention. Following fertilization, zebrafish embryos develop quickly over the next 24 hours, moving through a stereotypical program defined by cleavage, blastula, gastrula, and segmentation periods. During this time, embryos can be accurately staged on the basis of morphological characteristics as well as time post fertilization 3. Early cleavage stages exhibit several unique features, including a high ratio of cytoplasmic to nuclear volume, rapid cell divisions in which the entire genome is replicated in less than 15 minutes, and sac-like vesicles called karyomeres that transiently encase individual or groups of chromosomes near the end of mitosis 4– 7. Zebrafish display a conserved fate map following blastula stages and undergo further cell fate restriction during gastrulation 8.
Awakening of the genome
The maternal-to-zygotic transition (MZT) represents a critical milestone in early animal embryogenesis. During this transition, developmental control shifts from maternally provided proteins and RNAs to zygotic transcripts 9– 11. The timing of this transition varies between organisms. Activation occurs as early as the 1- to 2-cell stage in mouse, between the 4- and 16-cell stages in most other mammals, and as late as cell divisions 6 to 8 in Drosophila and zebrafish 9. In addition to dramatic transcriptional changes, MZT coincides with other important changes, including lengthening of the cell cycle, emergence of cell cycle check points, and the capacity for cells to undergo apoptosis 9, 11.
The transition from a fully quiescent to active genome during MZT offers a unique and exciting opportunity to tease apart the relationship between chromatin and transcription. In zebrafish, the bulk of zygotic transcription starts after the 10th cell division at the 1000-cell stage (3 hours post fertilization [hpf]) 4. However, a minor wave of zygotic genome activation (ZGA) precedes this stage, and the earliest zebrafish transcripts emerge from the miR-430 microRNA gene cluster at the 64-cell stage (2 hpf) 11– 17. MicroRNAs from this cluster in turn play a key role in the degradation of maternally loaded transcripts during MZT 18.
Core transcription factors drive zygotic genome activation
Initiation of zygotic transcription is generally mediated by a small number of pioneer factors, although the specific factors involved differ between species 19– 24. In zebrafish, transcription factors Pou5f3, Nanog, and SoxB1 proteins are critical for ZGA, binding to thousands of putative regulatory elements during this period 14, 25– 27. These transcription factors appear to be involved in nucleosome displacement through a two-step process. Before ZGA, they provide non-specific competition with histones on strong nucleosome footprints and then at ZGA they act synergistically to maintain open chromatin at regions with high nucleosome affinity 28, 29. Binding is associated with increased accessibility at MZT 29, 30, and recent work suggests that accessibility precedes and is predictive of future transcription 31.
During egg production, many mRNAs and proteins required for early development are maternally deposited. The extent to which early transcription factors are maternally loaded at the protein level is currently unclear. However, mRNAs encoding key transcription factors, including Pou5f3, Nanog, and SoxB1 proteins, are detected in embryos prior to the 64-cell stage, indicating that they are maternally loaded 14, 25, 27. Injection of translation-blocking morpholinos for either Pou5f3 or SoxB1 prevents ZGA 14, suggesting that translational regulation of these RNAs likely contributes to the control of ZGA.
Additional signals are required for zygotic genome activation
The exact sequence of events that leads to ZGA is not well understood and remains an area of intense investigation. In addition to translational regulation of transcription factors, depletion of repressors, accumulation of activators, and local changes in chromatin accessibility have been implicated in promoting ZGA 9, 11. Of particular note, recent studies in Xenopus suggest that the concentration of histones in the early embryo may be critical for ZGA 32– 36. This also appears to be the case in zebrafish, as injection of core histones into the early zebrafish embryo is sufficient to delay ZGA whereas histone depletion accelerates ZGA 36. The concentration of histones on DNA does not change during the period leading up to ZGA, but the non-DNA-bound core histone concentration is decreased by early cleavage divisions 36. This results in a high nucleus-to-cytoplasmic ratio of histones at ZGA. This observation has led to a model in which reduced concentrations of unbound histones allow key transcription factors to successfully compete for DNA binding, thereby initiating ZGA 29, 36, 37. One challenge to this model is that zebrafish embryos injected with mRNA encoding the cell cycle regulator Chk1 arrest development between the 4- and 16-cell stages and maintain a low overall nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio yet these embryos are still able to activate a subset of zygotic genes 38. Although further investigation is needed, short genes seem to be less affected by the nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio during embryogenesis compared with long genes 38, 39. This raises the possibility that ZGA is differentially regulated at different subclasses of sequences.
Intriguingly, in zebrafish, early replication of “first wave” zygotic genes precedes initiation of their transcription. This finding raises the possibility that DNA replication is controlled by the same factors that poise these genes for transcription or that the pre-MZT replication timing program itself helps to prime early ZGA 6.
The changing chromatin landscape during maternal-to-zygotic transition
The relatively large number of cell divisions occurring between fertilization and ZGA has made zebrafish an appealing model for profiling the chromatin changes during this critical period. Genome-wide changes in DNA methylation, histone modifications, and chromatin structure have all been profiled at high temporal resolution during early zebrafish embryogenesis ( Figure 1 and Figure 2). As in other species, the early zebrafish genome generally exhibits features of open chromatin, which become increasingly constrained as development progresses. However, recent work has also uncovered intriguing differences between the early chromatin landscape in zebrafish and other models.
Figure 1.
DNA methylation and histone modifications at transcriptionally active and repressed sequences.
Figure 2.
Dynamic changes in DNA methylation, histone modifications, and chromatin structure during early zebrafish development.
hpf, hours post fertilization.
5-methylcytosine
5-methylcytosine (5mC) is the most common DNA modification in vertebrate genomes. It is associated with transcriptional repression and predominates at CpG dinucleotides 40– 44. Most CpGs in vertebrate genomes are methylated; the primary exception consists of non-methylated islands that generally overlap with promoters and other cis regulatory elements 45– 48. 5mC is essential for viability in vertebrates, and global loss of 5mC results in lethality in mice, frogs, and zebrafish 49– 60. Vertebrate 5mC is established by de novo DNA methyltransferases of the Dnmt3 family and maintained by the maintenance DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1 and its cofactor Uhrf1 61. In addition to encoding Dnmt1 and Uhrf1, the zebrafish genome encodes six Dnmt3 orthologs, which exhibit differential expression during development 62– 69. Zebrafish also harbor orthologs of the 5mC dioxygenases Tet1, Tet2, and Tet3, which can promote active 5mC removal through the iterative oxidation of 5mC 70– 73.
The dynamics of DNA methylation are considerably different in zebrafish and mammals. The mammalian methylome is erased and re-established during preimplantation development and primordial germ cell formation 42, 74– 83. In contrast, zebrafish and other non-mammalian vertebrates do not appear to undergo similar large-scale demethylation 46, 84– 91. Instead, at least in zebrafish, the developing embryo adopts the 5mC landscape of the paternally inherited genome through gradual refashioning of the maternal methylome 46, 88. Surprisingly, the paternal genome is not required for this process 46. The specific de novo methyltransferases involved in establishing 5mC on the maternal methylome during this window have yet to be identified. Regions of methylation loss most likely undergo passive demethylation as Tet enzymes and oxidative derivatives of 5mC are undetectable during early zebrafish development 46, 73, 88, 92– 95.
The absence of Tets in zebrafish during early embryogenesis is in contrast to mammals, where Tets play a critical role in shaping the early embryonic methylome 92. As in mammals, Tet enzymes are important for demethylation of enhancer chromatin at later stages of zebrafish development 94, 96, 97. Very recent work suggests that 5mC patterns are also broadly stable in the zebrafish germline, although there is one curious exception 90, 91. There appears to be female-specific germline amplification and demethylation of an 11.5-kb repeat region encoding 45S ribosomal RNA 91. The failure to undergo large-scale erasure and re-establishment of 5mC in the zebrafish embryo or the germline may explain the transgenerational accumulation of 5mC at transgenes in zebrafish 98, 99. These observations also raise the possibility that inherited 5mC drives epiallelic regulation of endogenous zebrafish genes in some contexts.
Histone modifications
Modification of the N-terminal tails of histones plays an instrumental role in shaping genomes into regions that are restrictive or permissive for transcription 100– 102. Unlike mammalian sperm, where the bulk of histones are replaced with protamine, zebrafish sperm rely entirely on histones to package their DNA 103, 104. In contrast to 5mC, most histone modifications undergo erasure and re-establishment during early zebrafish development, although reprogrammed histone modifications do not necessarily match the pattern of either gamete 27, 28, 105– 109.
H3K27ac. One of the earliest histone modifications detected in the developing zebrafish embryo is histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation (H3K27ac), a modification associated with transcriptional activation 27. Deposition of H3K27ac is associated with initial access to promoters for early transcribed genes, and the highest H3K27ac enrichment occurs at Pou5f3-, SoxB1-, and Nanog-primed loci at ZGA 27, 31. Maternal depletion of the histone acetyltransferases ep300b, crebbpa, and crebbpb reduces detectable zygotic transcripts at the dome stage (4.3 hpf). Conversely, premature increases in the histone acetyltransferases Brd4 and P300 are sufficient to prematurely activate zygotic transcription 38. Together, these findings suggest a fundamental requirement for H3K27ac in promoting transcription during ZGA. Mechanistically, it is likely that increased histone acetylation during MZT helps relieve the repressive activity of histones, thereby promoting zygotic transcription 38.
H3K4me3/H3K27me3. Trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me3) and trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3) have important antagonistic roles in transcriptional regulation. H3K4me3 is typically associated with activation whereas H3K27me3 is associated with repression. A third class of bivalently marked genes harbor both modifications and exist in a state that is poised for transcription 110– 113. In zebrafish, H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 are present in sperm but are erased in the early embryo 27, 104, 106, 107, 109. Early chromatin microarray experiments revealed colocalized enrichment of H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 at promoters and transcriptional start sites at ZGA and these findings have recently been confirmed using chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) 27, 106, 107, 109. Only a subset of genes marked by H3K4me3 or H3K4me3/H3K27me3 are actively transcribed at ZGA, and many bivalently marked genes remain poised for later expression. In addition, a large class of promoters is marked only by H3K4me3 in sperm and the pre-ZGA embryo. Some of these become bivalent after ZGA. Other genes are newly marked exclusively with H3K4me3 at ZGA 106, 107, 109. Large-scale resetting of H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 is also observed in early mammalian embryos 114– 117.
Somewhat surprisingly, H3K27me3-mediated repression may have only limited roles in the zebrafish embryo. Mouse mutants for the H3K27 methyltransferase Ezh2 die during embryogenesis between 7.5 and 10.5 days post coitum 118. However, although maternal/zygotic zebrafish mutants lacking this enzyme exhibit global depletion of H3K27me3, they show only limited changes in early gene expression, develop normally through gastrulation, and form a normal body plan 119– 121.
H3K9me3. Trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9me3) is enriched at repetitive sequences, including transposons, pericentromeric satellite sequences, telomeres, and some gene clusters 122. H3K9me3 is an essential component of highly condensed constitutive heterochromatin, which silences expression from repetitive sequences 122. H3K9me3 is broadly depleted in early mouse, worm, fly, and zebrafish embryos, and large-scale establishment follows ZGA 108, 123– 125. In zebrafish, the establishment of H3K9me3 appears to rely on miR430-mediated degradation of maternally loaded Smarca2, an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling protein typically associated with the BAF complex 108. Other mechanisms have been proposed in flies and worms 123, 126. The lack of H3K9me3-marked heterochromatin in early embryos is somewhat surprising, as H3K9me3 is thought to promote genome stability 122, 127. The mechanisms that allow early embryos to maintain genome integrity in the absence of H3K9me3-marked constitutive heterochromatin are not known.
Structural changes
Beyond the direct modification of histones and DNA, profound structural changes are observed as the embryonic genome passes through early development 128, 129. Chromatin structure can be visualized on multiple levels that reflect distinct aspects of DNA packaging. Structure in the zebrafish embryo has been recently assessed at the level of local chromatin accessibility by assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq), at the level of chromatin interactions by high-throughput chromatin conformation capture (Hi-C), and at the level of cellular ultrastructure by transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
Accessibility. Fine-scale structural organization of chromatin is achieved through nucleosome positioning, which can promote or constrain transcription factor access to DNA. In zebrafish, prior to the major wave of ZGA, nucleosomes already appear positioned downstream of zygotic transcriptional start sites. During ZGA, these nucleosomes become organized into regular, well-positioned arrays near gene promoters 28, 130. Accessibility, as assessed by ATAC-seq, is detected at a small subset of sequences, including the miR-430 cluster at the 64-cell stage, but far more regions of accessibility emerge by the 1000-cell stage. At the onset of the major wave of ZGA, the majority of accessible regions are in promoters whereas by the dome stage accessibility at distal regulatory regions predominates 30, 31.
Compartments and topologically associated domains. Hi-C–based mapping of chromatin interactions in somatic cells has revealed two levels of organization. First, chromatin can be segregated into distinct compartments; the A compartments contain transcriptionally permissive chromatin, and B compartments contain repressed chromatin 131. Compartments can be further subdivided into genomic regions known as topologically associated domains (TADs), which are thought to serve as regulatory scaffolds 131– 133. At 24 hpf, zebrafish have A/B compartments and TADs with genomic features similar to those observed in mammals, including enrichment of binding sites for the regulatory factor CTCF at TAD borders 134– 138. In most studied organisms, there is an absence of both compartments and TADs in early embryogenesis and these structures emerge during the major wave of ZGA 135, 136, 139, 140. In contrast, Hi-C in zebrafish reveals evidence of compartments and TADs at the 128-cell stage (2.25 hpf) prior to the major wave of ZGA. These structural features are lost during major ZGA and then re-established as embryonic development progresses 134. The mechanisms that drive these very early chromatin interactions are not clear, nor are the reasons that TADs dissolve at ZGA. There is also a possibility that formation of karyomeres in the early embryo impacts TAD organization, although this has not been explored experimentally. Along with CTCF, the cohesin complex has been implicated in TAD formation. Intriguingly, there is global shift in the genomic distribution of the cohesion complex component Rad21 during the window in which TADs are remodeled in zebrafish, raising the possibility that there is a causative relationship between these events 141– 143.
Ultrastructure. TEM provides an additional approach for visualization of condensed chromatin ultrastructure. By this approach, condensed chromatin regions appear as electron-dense aggregates within cell nuclei. Consistent with the lack of histone modifications associated with heterochromatin, early zebrafish embryos also lack condensed chromatin ultrastructure. Just prior to the major wave of ZGA, at the 512-cell stage, embryonic nuclei are completely devoid of the electron-dense aggregates, and aggregates similar to those classically observed in somatic cells emerge in all embryonic nuclei between 3.7 and 6 hpf 108. This time line of compaction correlates with H3K9me3 establishment in the embryo 108. The clear presence of A and B compartments in zebrafish embryos by Hi-C at the 128-cell stage is curious in light of the lack of ultrastructure visualized by TEM at the 512-cell stage. Future analysis will be required to determine whether differences reflect minor discrepancies in timing between analyses or rather suggest that early Hi-C interactions are insufficient to drive chromatin segregation at the ultrastructure level.
Conceptual advances and emerging directions
Conceptual advances
In addition to foundational work profiling chromatin changes during embryogenesis, a number of important conceptual advances have emerged from recent studies in zebrafish. Among these is the concept of the placeholder nucleosomes, which enable programming of DNA methylation on the maternal genome during early embryogenesis and prime promoters for later expression. Placeholder nucleosomes contain the histone H2A variant H2A.Z and H3 histones that are monomethylated on lysine 4 (H3K4me1). In both sperm and cleavage-stage zebrafish embryos, placeholder nucleosomes occupy virtually all regions lacking DNA methylation, and perturbation of these placeholders causes expansion of 5mC domains 105, 144. At ZGA, genes marked by placeholders become either active and marked by H3K4me3 and H3K27ac or silenced and marked by H3K4me3/H3K27me3. The accumulation of these modifications suggests that these specialized nucleosomes poise gene promoters in an unmethylated state that can be readily activated at ZGA or during later development 27, 105. The presence of placeholders also suggests a clear mechanism by which methylation of the maternal methylome is remodeled during embryogenesis in the absence of information from the paternal methylome 105.
Another emerging theme arising from work in zebrafish is the importance of maternally loaded RNA and protein in shaping the early chromatin landscape. Depletion of maternally loaded histones is implicated in activation of zygotic transcription, while clearance of the maternal factor Smarca2 is required for H3K9me3 establishment and condensed chromatin ultrastructure 36, 108. Recent evidence also suggests that resolution of primed promoters into active or silenced states relies predominately on maternal factors, although the specific factors involved have not been identified 27. Around one third of zebrafish embryonic transcripts are exclusively maternal, whereas most additional transcripts are expressed both maternally and zygotically 16. These RNA pools include transcripts for many candidate chromatin regulators. To date, one challenge to understanding the function of maternally loaded gene products has been the need to generate maternal/zygotic mutant embryos. For genes that are also required later in development, generation of maternal zygotic mutants often requires the labor-intensive process of germ cell transplantation, which can present an obstacle to rapid progress 145. New technologies for germline-specific CRIPSR/CAS9-mediated mutation or degradation of maternally loaded gene products in the embryo are expected to aid in probing the functions of these maternally loaded factors 146– 151.
Emerging strategies
The ability to readily manipulate the chromosomal content of the early embryo provides a unique tool for probing early chromatin regulation. Haploid zebrafish embryos are relatively normal during the first day of development, and triploid zebrafish are viable to adulthood 152– 155. Haploid embryos have been elegantly used to demonstrate that the female methylome can reset without any input from male chromosomes and to show that decreased DNA content leads to delayed ZGA 38, 46. The recent discovery of the Ly6/uPAR protein Bouncer as necessary for species-specific fertilization in fish also opens up the opportunity to make hybrid embryos from medaka sperm and zebrafish eggs 156. A detailed assessment of ZGA or the early chromatin environment has yet to be undertaken in these embryos, but they offer a unique system in which to probe DNA intrinsic versus extrinsic factors that contribute to the shifting landscape during early embryogenesis.
In addition to the ability to manipulate chromosome content,
Injection of fluorescently labeled modification-specific antigen-binding fragments (Fabs) provides an additional new tool, allowing monitoring of chromatin changes in live zebrafish embryos 157– 159. By this approach, H3K27ac is observed in two nuclear foci corresponding to the miR-430 gene clusters in 64- to 1000-cell stage embryos. Intriguingly, H3K27ac still appears at these foci when zygotic transcription is inhibited, suggesting that the establishment of H3K27ac at these foci precedes activation of transcription 157.
Additional new technologies for visualizing chromatin and transcription in the early zebrafish embryo continue to emerge. Light-sheet microscopy tracking transcription factors, including Sox19b, was recently used to demonstrate that the chromatin-bound fraction of transcription factors increases over early embryonic cell divisions. Furthermore, new preprinted work visualizing transcriptional activity by three-color stimulated emission depletion (STED) super-resolution and live-cell microscopy suggests that, after transcription initiates, regions of active euchromatin form RNA-enriched microenvironments that exclude inactive euchromatin 37, 160.
Conclusions
The past few years have led to an explosion in articles exploiting the zebrafish system to understand chromatin dynamics and their relationship to transcription during the initial activation of the zygotic genome. Recent high-resolution profiling of DNA, histone modification, and structural changes occurring during this period offer a critical foundation for understanding how these many signals are integrated in the early embryo, while new technologies that are well suited to the zebrafish model offer the opportunity for continued advances.
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Abstract
Early animal development is characterized by intense reorganization of the embryonic genome, including large-scale changes in chromatin structure and in the DNA and histone modifications that help shape this structure. Particularly profound shifts in the chromatin landscape are associated with the maternal-to-zygotic transition, when the zygotic genome is first transcribed and maternally loaded transcripts are degraded. The accessibility of the early zebrafish embryo facilitates the interrogation of chromatin during this critical window of development, making it an important model for early chromatin regulation. Here, we review our current understanding of chromatin dynamics during early zebrafish development, highlighting new advances as well as similarities and differences between early chromatin regulation in zebrafish and other species.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer




