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Genome-wide map of regulatory interactions in the human genome
Author(s) -
Nastaran Heidari,
Douglas H. Phanstiel,
Chao He,
Fabian Grubert,
Fereshteh Jahanbani,
Maya Kasowski,
Michael Q. Zhang,
M Snyder
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.176586.114
Subject(s) - ctcf , biology , chromatin , chia pet , enhancer , chromosome conformation capture , genome , genetics , encode , regulatory sequence , gene , computational biology , transcription factor , chromatin immunoprecipitation , human genome , regulation of gene expression , housekeeping gene , promoter , gene expression , chromatin remodeling
Increasing evidence suggests that interactions between regulatory genomic elements play an important role in regulating gene expression. We generated a genome-wide interaction map of regulatory elements in human cells (ENCODE tier 1 cells, K562, GM12878) using Chromatin Interaction Analysis by Paired-End Tag sequencing (ChIA-PET) experiments targeting six broadly distributed factors. Bound regions covered 80% of DNase I hypersensitive sites including 99.7% of TSS and 98% of enhancers. Correlating this map with ChIP-seq and RNA-seq data sets revealed cohesin, CTCF, and ZNF143 as key components of three-dimensional chromatin structure and revealed how the distal chromatin state affects gene transcription. Comparison of interactions between cell types revealed that enhancer-promoter interactions were highly cell-type-specific. Construction and comparison of distal and proximal regulatory networks revealed stark differences in structure and biological function. Proximal binding events are enriched at genes with housekeeping functions, while distal binding events interact with genes involved in dynamic biological processes including response to stimulus. This study reveals new mechanistic and functional insights into regulatory region organization in the nucleus.

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