Chromatin regulation provides a mechanism through which cells dynamically and rapidly regulate their gene expression profiles, playing a pivotal role in diverse biological processes and disease states. The Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin with high-throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) is a method that enables genome-wide detection of accessible chromatin regions, providing information on nucleosome positioning and the epigenetic regulation of the chromatin structure. ATAC-seq has been used in various biological contexts, and several reports have demonstrated its application to studying infections with viral or bacterial pathogens. The ability to characterize changes in viral or bacterial genome accessibility during infections provides insights into both pathogen replication and host defense mechanisms. Viral genomes undergo dynamic changes in their structural landscape to facilitate replication and evade host immune responses. Additionally, host cells encode DNA sensors, which are specialized proteins that bind to viral genomes to initiate innate immune responses and sometimes, to suppress viral gene expression. ATAC-seq enables the systematic detection of key structural changes on the viral genome mediated by either viral or host proteins, offering mechanistic insights into virus-host interactions. Here, we describe an ATAC-seq method optimized for studying changes in chromatin accessibility in both host and viral genomes. We have previously applied this method to demonstrate a systematic decrease in the genome accessibility of herpes simplex virus type I (HSV-1) enabled by a host antiviral factor, the interferon-gamma inducible protein 16 (IFI16) during infection of human fibroblasts. This protocol can be adapted to various biological contexts involving the introduction of foreign DNA, making it a valuable tool for a broad range of research endeavors.
Keywords: ATAC-seq; Cell lysis; Chromatin accessibility; Infection; Library generation; Normalization; Transposition; Virus infection; qPCR.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.