. These modified histones are then recognized by cell-specific transcription factors that activate genes leading to the differentiation of B-cells or macrophages. Pioneer factors can exhibit their greatest range of effects on transcription through the modulation of epigenetic factors by recruiting activating or repressing histone modification enzymes and controlling
CpG methylation by protecting specific
cysteine residues. This has effects on controlling the timing of transcription during cell differentiation processes.
Histone modification Histone modification is a well-studied mechanism to transiently adjust chromatin density. Pioneer factors can play a role in this by binding specific enhancers and flagging histone modification enzymes to that specific gene. Repressive pioneer factors can inhibit transcription by recruiting factors that modify histones that further tighten the chromatin. This is important to limit gene expression to specific cell types and has to be removed only when cell differentiation begins.
FoxD3 has been associated as a repressor of both
B-cell and
melanocytic cell differentiation pathways, maintaining repressive histone modifications where bound, that have to be overcome to start differentiation. Pioneer factors can also be associated with recruiting transcription-activating histone modifications. Enzymes that modify H3K4 with
mono and di-methylation are associated with increasing transcription and have been shown to bind pioneer factors. FoxA1 binding induces HSK4me2 during neuronal differentiation of
pluripotent stem cells as well as the loss of DNA methylation. SOX9 recruits histone modification enzymes
MLL3 and
MLL4 to deposit
H3K4me1 prior to the opening of enhancers in developing hair follicle and basal cell carcinoma.
DNA methylation Pioneer factors can also affect transcription and differentiation through the control of DNA methylation. Pioneer factors that bind to
CpG islands and cytosine residues block access to methyltransferases. Many eukaryotic cells have CpG islands in their promoters that can be modified by methylation having adverse effects on their ability to control transcription. This phenomenon is also present in promoters without CpG islands where single cytosine residues are protected from methylation until further cell differentiation. An example is FoxD3 preventing methylation of a cytosine residue in
Alb1 enhancer, acting as a place holder for FoxA1 later in hepatic as well as in CpG islands of genes in
chronic lymphocytic leukemia. For stable control of methylation state the cytosine residues are covered during
mitosis, unlike most other transcription factors, to prevent methylation. Studies have shown that during mitosis 15% of all interphase FoxA1 binding sites were bound. The protection of cytosine methylation can be quickly removed allowing for rapid induction when a signal is present.
Other pioneer factors A well studied pioneer factor family is the Groucho-related (Gro/TLE/Grg) transcription factors that often have a negative effect on transcription. These chromatin binding domains can span up to 3-4 nucleosomes. These large domains are scaffolds for further protein interactions and also modify the chromatin for other pioneer factors such as FoxA1 which has been shown to bind to Grg3. Transcription factors with
zinc finger DNA binding domains, such as the
GATA family and glucocorticoid receptor. ==Role in cancer==