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Rapid and Pervasive Changes in Genome-wide Enhancer Usage during Mammalian Development
Author(s) -
Alex S. Nord,
Matthew J. Blow,
Catia Attanasio,
Jennifer A. Akiyama,
Amy Holt,
Roya Hosseini,
Sengthavy Phouanenavong,
Ingrid Plajzer-Frick,
Malak Shoukry,
Veena Afzal,
John L.R. Rubenstein,
Edward M. Rubin,
L Pennacchio,
Axel Visel
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2013.11.033
Subject(s) - enhancer , biology , epigenomics , genome , genetics , computational biology , enhancer rnas , context (archaeology) , regulation of gene expression , gene , transgene , evolutionary biology , gene expression , dna methylation , paleontology
Enhancers are distal regulatory elements that can activate tissue-specific gene expression and are abundant throughout mammalian genomes. Although substantial progress has been made toward genome-wide annotation of mammalian enhancers, their temporal activity patterns and global contributions in the context of developmental in vivo processes remain poorly explored. Here we used epigenomic profiling for H3K27ac, a mark of active enhancers, coupled to transgenic mouse assays to examine the genome-wide utilization of enhancers in three different mouse tissues across seven developmental stages. The majority of the ∼90,000 enhancers identified exhibited tightly temporally restricted predicted activity windows and were associated with stage-specific biological functions and regulatory pathways in individual tissues. Comparative genomic analysis revealed that evolutionary conservation of enhancers decreases following midgestation across all tissues examined. The dynamic enhancer activities uncovered in this study illuminate rapid and pervasive temporal in vivo changes in enhancer usage that underlie processes central to development and disease.

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