This manuscript describes methods for applying peptide microarray technology to specificity profiling of antibodies that recognize histones and their post-translational modifications.
Post-translational modifications (PTMs) on histone proteins are widely studied for their roles in regulating chromatin structure and gene expression. The mass production and distribution of antibodies specific to histone PTMs has greatly facilitated research on these marks. As histone PTM antibodies are key reagents for many chromatin biochemistry applications, rigorous analysis of antibody specificity is necessary for accurate data interpretation and continued progress in the field. This protocol describes an integrated pipeline for the design, fabrication and use of peptide microarrays for profiling the specificity of histone antibodies. The design and analysis aspects of this procedure are facilitated by ArrayNinja, an open-source and interactive software package we recently developed to streamline the customization of microarray print formats. This pipeline has been used to screen a large number of commercially available and widely used histone PTM antibodies, and data generated from these experiments are freely available through an online and expanding Histone Antibody Specificity Database. Beyond histones, the general methodology described herein can be applied broadly to the analysis of PTM-specific antibodies.
Genomic DNA is elegantly packaged inside the eukaryotic cell nucleus with histone proteins to form chromatin. The repeating subunit of chromatin is the nucleosome, which consists of 147 base pairs of DNA wrapped around an octameric core of histone proteins – H2A, H2B, H3, and H41. Chromatin is broadly organized into loosely packed euchromatin and tightly packed heterochromatin domains. The degree of chromatin compaction regulates the extent to which protein machineries can access the underlying DNA to carry out fundamental DNA-templated processes like replication, transcription, and repair.
Key regulators of genome accessibility in the context of chromatin are PTMs on the unstructured tail and core domains of histone proteins2,3. Histone PTMs function directly by influencing the structure of chromatin4 and indirectly through the recruitment of reader proteins and their associated macromolecular complexes that have chromatin remodeling, enzymatic, and scaffolding activities5. Studies of histone PTM function over the past two decades overwhelmingly suggest these marks play key roles in regulating cell fate, organismal development, and disease initiation/progression. Fueled by advances in mass spectrometry-based proteomic technology, more than 20 unique histone PTMs on more than 80 distinct histone residues have been discovered6. Notably, these modifications often occur in combinations, and consistent with the "histone code" hypothesis, numerous studies suggest that reader proteins are targeted to discrete regions of chromatin through recognition of specific combinations of histone PTMs7,8,9. A key challenge moving forward will be to assign functions to the growing list of histone PTMs and to determine how specific combinations of histone PTMs orchestrate the dynamic functions associated with chromatin.
Antibodies are the lynchpin reagents for the detection of histone PTMs. As such, more than 1,000 histone PTM-specific antibodies have been commercially developed for use in chromatin biochemistry research. With the rapid development of high-throughput DNA sequencing technology, these reagents are being used extensively by individual investigators and large-scale epigenomics "roadmap" initiatives (e.g., ENCODE and BLUEPRINT) in ChIP-seq (chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with next-generation sequencing) pipelines to generate high-resolution spatial maps of histone PTM distribution genome-wide10,11. However, recent studies have shown that the specificity of histone PTM antibodies can be highly variable and that these reagents exhibit unfavorable properties such as off-target epitope recognition, strong positive and negative influence by neighboring PTMs, and difficulty discriminating the modification order on a particular residue (e.g., mono-, di-, or tri-methyllysine)12,13,14,15,16,17,18. Therefore, rigorous quality control of histone PTM-specific antibody reagents is necessary to accurately interpret data generated with these valuable reagents.
Microarray technology enables the simultaneous interrogation of thousands of macromolecular interactions in a high-throughput, reproducible, and miniaturized format. For this reason, a variety of microarray platforms have been created to analyze protein-DNA19,20, protein-protein 21, and protein-peptide interactions22. Indeed, histone peptide microarrays have emerged as an informative discovery platform for chromatin biochemistry research, enabling high-throughput profiling of the writers, erasers, and readers of histone PTMs15,23,24, and also for the analysis of histone antibody specificity17,25. Beyond their application in chromatin and epigenetics research, histone peptide arrays have potential utility as a diagnostic/prognostic test for systemic lupus erythematosus and other autoimmune diseases where anti-chromatin autoantibodies are generated26,27.
Here, we describe an integrated pipeline that we have developed for designing, fabricating, and querying histone peptide microarrays to generate specificity profiles for antibodies that recognize histones and their PTMs. The pipeline is facilitated by ArrayNinja, an open-source, interactive software application that we recently developed, which integrates the design and analysis stages of microarray experiments28. ArrayNinja works best in Google Chrome. Briefly, a robotic contact microarray printer is used to deposit a library of biotin-conjugated histone peptides at defined positions on streptavidin-coated glass microscope slides. Arrays can then be used in a competitive and parallel assay format to interrogate antibody-epitope interactions (Figure 1). The peptide library consists of hundreds of unique synthetic peptides harboring PTMs (lysine acetylation, lysine/arginine methylation, and serine/threonine phosphorylation) alone and in relevant combinations largely derived from proteomics datasets. Methods for peptide synthesis and validation are detailed elsewhere23. Data generated from our ongoing histone PTM antibody screening efforts utilizing this array platform are archived on a public web resource, the Histone Antibody Specificity Database (www.histoneantibodies.com). Notably, histone peptide microarrays fabricated with variations of this protocol have also been used extensively to characterize the activity of histone PTM reader domains8,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37 and more recently to profile histone PTM writer and eraser activities24.
Figure 1: Cartoon Depiction of the Stepwise Procedure for Antibody Screening on a Histone Peptide microarray. Biotinylated histone peptides harboring defined post-translational modifications (red and blue circles) are co-printed with biotin-fluorescein on streptavidin-coated glass. Positive interactions are visualized as red fluorescence. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
1. Installing and Running ArrayNinja
2. Designing the Array Slide and Source Plate Layout
Figure 2: ArrayNinja Design Module. A screen shot of the ArrayNinja design module is shown in the dotted line. The control panel (top) shows all of the parameters that can be altered on the microarray printer. As these parameters are adjusted, the cartoon image of the slide layout (bottom left) updates in real time. After the layout is set, the user can mouse over individual spots to enter unique feature identifiers. ArrayNinja constructs from this user input a map of the position of each feature in the source plate(s) (bottom right) needed to fabricate a specified microarray slide layout. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
3. Fabricating Microarrays
4. Partitioning Microarray Slides
Figure 3: Microarray Fabrication. (A) Histone peptide microarray fabrication on streptavidin-coated microscope slides using a contact microarray printer. (B) Microarrays fabricated with 3 subarrays of a 48 x 48 grid of peptide features. Separation of (C) 3 subarrays with a hydrophobic wax pen, (D) 2 subarrays with a silicon adhesive, and (E) 48 subarrays with a wax imprint. All microarrays shown are fabricated using 25 x 75 mm microscope slides. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
5. Hybridizing a Histone PTM Antibody with a Peptide Microarray
6. Analysis of Microarray Data using ArrayNinja
Figure 4: ArrayNinja Analysis Module. A screen shot of the ArrayNinja analysis module is shown. The control panel (top left) shows all of the parameters that can be adjusted to visualize the array, find spots, and align a grid over the array image. Hovering the mouse over a feature shows a zoomed-in view (top right) and displays a popup that contains the identification information associated with that feature (bottom). Reference spots selected for background correction are orange. Features to be excluded from downstream analysis are white. ArrayNinja contains a text-based search feature that highlights matching features in yellow, as shown in the example for H4K16. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
This protocol has been used to design and fabricate a peptide microarray platform for the analysis of histone PTM antibody specificity. The array queries a library of more than 300 unique peptide features (20 – 40 residues in length) representing many of the known combinations of PTMs found on core and variant histone proteins38. This pipeline has been a workhorse for the screening of many widely used and commercially available histone PTM antibodies, and full datasets are available on the Histone Antibody Specificity Database (www.histoneantibodies.com).17
The backbone of our pipeline is ArrayNinja, an open-source software application that we recently developed, which integrates the planning and analysis stages of microarray work28. The ArrayNinja analysis module allows users to interact in informative ways with their raw array image file. The printed feature identities are automatically integrated with the image, and these identities can be revealed by hovering the mouse cursor over a spot. This integration also enables rapid searching for features of interest by name and exclusion of features from downstream analysis. ArrayNinja also provides options for local and nonlocal background noise correction as well as a correction scheme that adapts to spot morphology. Full details of ArrayNinja and its capabilities can be found elsewhere28.
ArrayNinja calculates signal intensities for each peptide feature and aggregates those intensities into averages with error based on feature identity. Raw and normalized signal averages are returned, where the normalization constant is determined by the brightest feature average. The signal intensities for each peptide can be used to compare the relative affinity of the antibody among features on the microarray. Here, we show representative datasets for two antibodies profiled with this pipeline, highlighting epitope recognition properties that should be considered when interpreting results obtained with these reagents (Figure 5).
Off-target recognition is a concern for all antibodies, and commonalities in epitopes surrounding modifiable histone residues makes this a particular challenge for histone PTM antibodies. Indeed, an antibody raised to recognize tri-methylated lysine 9 on histone H3 (H3K9me3) binds peptides tri-methylated at H3K18, H3K27, and lysine 20 on histone H4 (H4K20me3) as well or better than H3K9me3 (Figure 5A). The sequence surrounding H3K9 (ARKS) is conserved with H3K27, and cross-reactivity of histone PTM antibodies and chromatin regulators that bind and modify these sites has been noted elsewhere15,39,40,41. Another observed off-target recognition property common to methyl-lysine antibodies is an inability to discriminate methyl order. This is exemplified by results obtained with an H3K4me3 antibody, which cross-reacts with H3K4me2 and H3K4me1 peptides (Figure 5B). Distinguishing between the methyl order is important, as studies have shown that H3K4me3, H3K4me2, and H3K4me1 are distributed differently across the genome and likely function in different ways42,43. For example, H3K4me3 is located at the transcription start sites of most actively transcribed genes, whereas active enhancers are commonly marked by H3K4me144.
In addition to off-target recognition, positive and negative influence by neighboring PTMs is a commonly observed property of histone antibodies. The H3K9me3 antibody shown in Figure 5A is positively influenced by acetyl groups on neighboring lysine residues. Indeed, recent mass spectrometry analysis shows that acetyl groups, particularly H3K14ac, frequently co-occur with H3K9me338. The H3K4me3 antibody shown in Figure 5B is negatively impacted by neighboring phosphorylation at threonine 6 (H3T6p). H3T6p is known to have both positive and negative impact on the recognition of H3K4me3 by reader proteins, and this may serve as a dynamic mechanism to regulate recruitment of specific chromatin factors15,45.
Figure 5: Analysis of Antibodies on Peptide Microarrays. Analysis of (A) H3K9me3 (Antibody #1) and (B) H3K4me3 (Antibody #2) antibodies on peptide microarrays. Green lines/bars indicate the peptide harboring only the intended target PTM. Grey lines/bars indicate peptides whose signal intensity is not significantly different (p > 0.05) from the green line/bar, calculated using a one-way ANOVA comparing the mean relative intensity of all peptides to the target peptide. Red and blue lines/bars indicate signal that is significantly decreased or increased (p < 0.05) from the green line/bar, respectively. Orange lines/bars indicate off-target peptides. Data are displayed as (left) a visual illustration of PTM complexity on peptides spanning N-terminal regions of the H3 and H4 tails, where the width of each line corresponds to the relative intensity measured for that peptide feature, and (right) bar graphs displaying the relative signal intensity averages ± SEM from 6 individual spot measurements on microarrays. All peptides included in this analysis are 20 amino acids in length corresponding to either histone H3 amino acids 1 – 20 or 15 – 34. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Antibody reliability in biomedical research applications is paramount46,47. This is especially true in chromatin biochemistry given the position of antibodies as key tools for the majority of techniques developed to characterize the abundance and distribution of histone PTMs. The protocol presented here details an optimized pipeline for the design, fabrication, and use of peptide microarrays to analyze histone PTM antibody specificity. This pipeline has been used to screen a large number of commercially available and widely used histone PTM antibodies, and data generated from these experiments are freely available through an online and expanding Histone Antibody Specificity Database (www.histoneantibodies.com)17.
Apparent from our and others' work are frequent instances of unfavorable histone PTM antibody behavior that can complicate the interpretation of data generated with these reagents12,15,17. More rigorous and comprehensive quality control measures from antibody companies are therefore warranted. Experimentalists and epigenome consortium leaders (e.g., ENCODE, BLUEPRINT) need to also show rigor in their own evaluation of histone PTM antibodies when choosing a reagent for their study. In addition, efforts to minimize batch-to-batch variability, standardize the use of highly validated affinity reagents across epigenome mapping platforms, and develop alternative affinity tools are all actionable items to address this research problem.
Microarrays have a number of advantages over microplate-based assays (e.g., ELISA) that make them particularly useful for characterizing histone PTM antibody specificity. Microarrays enable parallel and competitive analysis of thousands of individual peptide-antibody interactions with minimal material consumption. In the protocol described here, 700 picomoles of each peptide feature is sufficient to produce 100 microarray slides. Additionally, antibody analysis can be completed using less than 1 µg of antibody, and custom array formats enable multiple antibodies and various antibody dilutions to be screened in parallel.
Designing custom feature layouts on microarrays can be a laborious task. Additionally, each new microarray design requires build-out of a new analysis template. We found this to be prohibitive for realizing the full utility of microarray technology. This motivated our development of ArrayNinja, an interactive, open-source software application that seamlessly integrates the design and analysis aspects of microarray experiments28. The design module of ArrayNinja allows the user to interactively design a slide to fit the layout required for an experiment. ArrayNinja virtually maps the robotic motion of the printer and translates this to the source plate layout for a given slide design (Figure 2). Creating custom array formats is now a quick and routine practice. Another key feature of ArrayNinja is the connection between the design and analysis steps of microarray work. With user-defined settings from the design module, ArrayNinja overlays an interactive grid on a scanned microarray image, allowing the user to mouse over any feature to reveal its identity or search for features of interest (Figure 4).
Several critical steps of this pipeline are worth noting. First, while designing the print layout, consideration should be taken to include enough replicate spots in order to attain significance in data collection. Additionally, to account for pin-to-pin variability, each feature should be deposited by at least two different pins. Finally, perhaps the most critical step is the physical generation of the source plate. Successful use of the high-density microarrays described in this protocol relies on the ability to map the identity of each feature to their physical location on the final slide. This mapping task is not trivial, but ArrayNinja greatly facilitates this step by providing a plate map. Any deviations to this map while creating the source plates will lead to incorrect conclusions during analysis.
It is important to consider the limitations of using microarrays for the analysis of antibody specificity. While off-target histone PTM antibody properties captured on the array have been demonstrated to translate to experimental approaches with similar hybridization conditions (e.g., immunoblot)17,18, the extent to which array-based profiling of antibody specificity translates to ChIP protocols is suggestive14,17 but warrants more critical evaluation.
Variations to this pipeline have been previously described for analysis of histone readers, writers, and erasers23,24. Modifying this platform for utility beyond epigenetics research could be easily adapted for any printable library of interest. It is also possible that material more complex than peptides can be used to construct microarrays for chromatin biochemistry research. For example, recombinant nucleosomes displaying various PTMs are now routinely being generated in the laboratory setting48 and profiling the specificity of histone PTM antibodies in the context of this physiologically-relevant chromatin subunit will be an exciting area of future study.
A widely-used alternative approach to the protocol described here utilizes SPOT array technology, where hundreds of peptides are directly synthesized on a cellulose membrane support49. The membrane itself can then be used for microarray applications50. SPOT technology is advantageous from the standpoint of library complexity and synthesis cost. However, the purity of peptides synthesized using the SPOT method have been reported to vary, and quality control and purification measures common to solid-phase peptide synthesis (e.g., HPLC and mass spectrometry) are not routinely performed50,51. Additionally, peptide presentation on nitrocellulose is not uniform and may shield epitopes. Notably, both types of histone peptide array platforms are available commercially for users who do not have access to the specialized equipment needed to synthesize peptides and fabricate arrays.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported in part by the Van Andel Research Institute and a research grant from the National Institutes of Health (CA181343) to S.B.R.
Printing Buffer | ArrayIt | PPB | |
BSA | Omnipure | 2390 | |
Streptavidin-coated glass microscope slides | Greiner Bio-one | 439003-25 | |
polypropylene 384 well plate | Greiner Bio-one | 784201 | |
Biotin-fluorescein | Sigma | 53608 | |
contact microarray printer | Aushon | 2470 | Aushon 2470 Microarray Printer |
contact microarray printer | Gene Machines | OmniGrid 100 | OmniGrid Microarray Printer |
PBS | Invitrogen | 14190 | |
Blocking Buffer | ArrayIt | SBB | |
Hydrophobic wax pen | Vector Labs | H-4000 | ImmEdge Hydrophobic Barrier PAP Pen |
Silicon Gasket | Grace Bio-labs | 622511 | |
Hybridization Vessel | Thermo Scientific | 267061 | or similar vessel |
Fluorescent-dye conjugated secondary antibody | Life Technologies | A-21244 | Alexa Fluor 647 (anti-rabbit) |
Fluorescent-dye conjugated secondary antibody | Life Technologies | A-21235 | Alexa Fluor 647 (anti-mouse) |
Wax Imprinter | ArrayIt | MSI48 | |
Tween-20 | Omnipure | 9490 | |
Microarray Scanner | Innopsys | InnoScan 1100AL | or equivalent microarray scanner |
EipTitan Histone Peptide Microarray | Epicypher | 112001 | |
AbSurance Pro Histone Peptide Microarray | Millipore | 16668 | |
MODified Histone Peptide Array | Active Motif | 13001 | |
Histone Code Peptide Microarrays | JPT | His_MA_01 | |
Wax | Royal Oak | GulfWax | for wax imprinter |
Humidified Microarray Slide Hybridization Chamber | VWR | 97000-284 | |
High throughput microscope slide washing chamber | ArrayIt | HTW | |
Microscope slide centrifuge | VWR | 93000-204 | |
Antibody 1 | Abcam | 8898 | |
Antibody 2 | Millipore | 07-473 | |
Biotinylated histone peptide | EpiCypher | 12-0001 | Example peptide. Similar peptides with various modifications are available from several commercial sources. |
ImageMagick | https://www.imagemagick.org/script/index.php | ||
ArrayNinja | https://rothbartlab.vai.org/tools/ |