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The dynseq browser track shows context-specific features at nucleotide resolution

Authors :
Surag Nair
Arjun Barrett
Daofeng Li
Brian J. Raney
Brian T. Lee
Peter Kerpedjiev
Vivekanandan Ramalingam
Anusri Pampari
Fritz Lekschas
Ting Wang
Maximilian Haeussler
Anshul Kundaje
Source :
Nature genetics, vol 54, iss 11, Nat Genet
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

High-throughput experimental platforms have revolutionized the ability to profile biochemical and functional properties of biological sequences such as DNA, RNA and proteins. By collating several data modalities with customizable tracks rendered using intuitive visualizations, genome browsers enable an interactive and interpretable exploration of diverse types of genome profiling experiments and derived annotations. However, existing genome browser tracks are not well suited for intuitive visualization of high-resolution DNA sequence features such as transcription factor motifs. Typically, motif instances in regulatory DNA sequences are visualized as BED-based annotation tracks, which highlight the genomic coordinates of the motif instances but do not expose their specific sequences. Instead, a genome sequence track needs to be cross-referenced with the BED track to identify sequences of motif hits. Even so, quantitative information about the motif instances such as affinity or conservation as well as differences in base resolution from the consensus motif are not immediately apparent. This makes interpretation slow and challenging. This problem is compounded when analyzing several cellular states and/or molecular readouts (such as ATAC-seq and ChIP–seq) simultaneously, as coordinates of enriched regions (peaks) and the set of active transcription factor motifs vary across cell states.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics, vol 54, iss 11, Nat Genet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87f6c0dd41a6d0a4f34f6c2f8dd5e2a6