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Metrics of sequence constraint overlook regulatory sequences in an exhaustive analysis at phox2b
Author(s) -
David McGaughey,
Ryan M. Vinton,
Jimmy Huynh,
Amr AlSaif,
M Beer,
Andrew S. McCallion
Publication year - 2007
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.6929408
Subject(s) - biology , constraint (computer aided design) , computational biology , regulatory sequence , genetics , sequence (biology) , enhancer , zebrafish , function (biology) , conserved sequence , gene , genome , sequence analysis , regulation of gene expression , base sequence , transcription factor , mechanical engineering , engineering
Despite its recognized utility, the extent to which evolutionary sequence conservation-based approaches may systematically overlook functional noncoding sequences remains unclear. We have tiled across sequence encompassing the zebrafish phox2b gene, ultimately evaluating 48 amplicons corresponding to all noncoding sequences therein for enhancer activity in zebrafish. Post hoc analyses of this interval utilizing five commonly used measures of evolutionary constraint (AVID, MLAGAN, SLAGAN, phastCons, WebMCS) demonstrate that each systematically overlooks regulatory sequences. These established algorithms detected only 29%–61% of our identified regulatory elements, consistent with the suggestion that many regulatory sequences may not be readily detected by metrics of sequence constraint. However, we were able to discriminate functional from nonfunctional sequences based upon GC composition and identified position weight matrices (PWM), demonstrating that, in at least one case, deleting sequences containing a subset of these PWMs from one identified regulatory element abrogated its regulatory function. Collectively, these data demonstrate that the noncoding functional component of vertebrate genomes may far exceed estimates predicated on evolutionary constraint.

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