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A Novel Approach for Transcription Factor Analysis Using SELEX with High-Throughput Sequencing (TFAST)
Author(s) -
D. Reiss,
Frederick M. Howard,
Harry L. T. Mobley
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0042761
Subject(s) - computational biology , systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment , throughput , transcription factor , biology , dna sequencing , genetics , computer science , dna , gene , rna , telecommunications , wireless
Background In previous work, we designed a modified aptamer-free SELEX-seq protocol (afSELEX-seq) for the discovery of transcription factor binding sites. Here, we present original software, TFAST, designed to analyze afSELEX-seq data, validated against our previously generated afSELEX-seq dataset and a model dataset. TFAST is designed with a simple graphical interface (Java) so that it can be installed and executed without extensive expertise in bioinformatics. TFAST completes analysis within minutes on most personal computers. Methodology Once afSELEX-seq data are aligned to a target genome, TFAST identifies peaks and, uniquely, compares peak characteristics between cycles. TFAST generates a hierarchical report of graded peaks, their associated genomic sequences, binding site length predictions, and dummy sequences. Principal Findings Including additional cycles of afSELEX-seq improved TFAST's ability to selectively identify peaks, leading to 7,274, 4,255, and 2,628 peaks identified in two-, three-, and four-cycle afSELEX-seq. Inter-round analysis by TFAST identified 457 peaks as the strongest candidates for true binding sites. Separating peaks by TFAST into classes of worst, second-best and best candidate peaks revealed a trend of increasing significance (e-values 4.5×10 12 , 2.9×10 −46 , and 1.2×10 −73 ) and informational content (11.0, 11.9, and 12.5 bits over 15 bp) of discovered motifs within each respective class. TFAST also predicted a binding site length (28 bp) consistent with non-computational experimentally derived results for the transcription factor PapX (22 to 29 bp). Conclusions/Significance TFAST offers a novel and intuitive approach for determining DNA binding sites of proteins subjected to afSELEX-seq. Here, we demonstrate that TFAST, using afSELEX-seq data, rapidly and accurately predicted sequence length and motif for a putative transcription factor's binding site.

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