SMARCA2 is an essential and potent cofactor for a specific subset of the glucocorticoid response in A549 cells.
Glucocorticoids are a widely used, potent class of anti-inflammatory drugs that modulate the expression of hundreds of genes across the genome. Although the glucocorticoid response is primarily carried out by the glucocorticoid receptor (NR3C1, a.k.a. GR), there are many glucocorticoid receptor co-factors that are also essential to the downstream effects. To identify novel factors necessary for the glucocorticoid gene expression response, we used a genome-wide CRISPR screen in A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells. In that screen, we knocked out every gene in the human genome, and measured the effect of expression of the glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ), a classic glucocorticoid-response gene. We identified two chromatin remodeling proteins, SMARCA2 and BPTF, that are essential for GILZ expression. We then evaluated the genome-wide effects of SMARCA2 and BPTF on glucocorticoid-mediated gene expression. BPTF had a highly specific role in the glucocorticoid response, affecting the expression of only a handful of genes, and having virtually no effect on dexamethasone-induced changes in chromatin accessibility. However, SMARCA2 was necessary for 27% of dexamethasone-induced transcriptional changes (152 genes), and ~7% of dexamethasone-induced changes in chromatin accessibility (586 regions of the genome). Genomic regions with SMARCA2-dependent changes in chromatin accessibility were characterized by high dexamethasone-induced regulatory activity in a massively parallel reporter assay, and dexamethasone-induced increases in transcription factor binding and chromatin states. Taken together, these data suggest that SMARCA2 is critical for chromatin remodeling at a specific set of genomic regions with high regulatory activity, which in turn drive changes in expression for many glucocorticoid-responsive genes.