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Conservation of trans-acting circuitry during mammalian regulatory evolution.

Authors :
Stergachis AB
Neph S
Sandstrom R
Haugen E
Reynolds AP
Zhang M
Byron R
Canfield T
Stelhing-Sun S
Lee K
Thurman RE
Vong S
Bates D
Neri F
Diegel M
Giste E
Dunn D
Vierstra J
Hansen RS
Johnson AK
Sabo PJ
Wilken MS
Reh TA
Treuting PM
Kaul R
Groudine M
Bender MA
Borenstein E
Stamatoyannopoulos JA
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2014 Nov 20; Vol. 515 (7527), pp. 365-70.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The basic body plan and major physiological axes have been highly conserved during mammalian evolution, yet only a small fraction of the human genome sequence appears to be subject to evolutionary constraint. To quantify cis- versus trans-acting contributions to mammalian regulatory evolution, we performed genomic DNase I footprinting of the mouse genome across 25 cell and tissue types, collectively defining ∼8.6 million transcription factor (TF) occupancy sites at nucleotide resolution. Here we show that mouse TF footprints conjointly encode a regulatory lexicon that is ∼95% similar with that derived from human TF footprints. However, only ∼20% of mouse TF footprints have human orthologues. Despite substantial turnover of the cis-regulatory landscape, nearly half of all pairwise regulatory interactions connecting mouse TF genes have been maintained in orthologous human cell types through evolutionary innovation of TF recognition sequences. Furthermore, the higher-level organization of mouse TF-to-TF connections into cellular network architectures is nearly identical with human. Our results indicate that evolutionary selection on mammalian gene regulation is targeted chiefly at the level of trans-regulatory circuitry, enabling and potentiating cis-regulatory plasticity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
515
Issue :
7527
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25409825
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature13972