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The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome

Authors :
Vishwanath R. Iyer
Lingyun Song
Michael O. Dorschner
Joshua M. Akey
Andrew B. Stergachis
Kristen Lee
Anthony Shafer
Shinny Vong
Amartya Sanyal
Hongzhu Qu
Audra K. Johnson
Ericka M. Johnson
Kavita Garg
Minerva E. Sanchez
Daniel Bates
Benjamin Vernot
George Stamatoyannopoulos
Tanya Kutyavin
Robert E. Thurman
Patrick A. Navas
Douglas Dunn
Eric Rynes
Bryan R. Lajoie
Matthew T. Maurano
Jeff Vierstra
Molly Weaver
Jason D. Lieb
Sam John
Alexias Safi
Lisa Boatman
Shane Neph
Zhancheng Zhang
Yongqi Yan
Bum Kyu Lee
Dimitra Lotakis
Zhuzhu Zhang
Gregory E. Crawford
Tristan Frum
Abigail K. Ebersol
Richard Sandstrom
Theresa K. Canfield
Eric Haugen
Erika Giste
Job Dekker
Muneesh Tewari
Alex Reynolds
Eric D. Nguyen
Fidencio Neri
Richard Humbert
Peter J. Sabo
Morgan Diegel
John A. Stamatoyannopoulos
Vaughn Roach
Hao Wang
Rajinder Kaul
Terrence S. Furey
Nathan C. Sheffield
R. Scott Hansen
Jeremy M. Simon
Shamil R. Sunyaev
Boris Lenhard
Darin London
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) are markers of regulatory DNA and have underpinned the discovery of all classes of cis-regulatory elements including enhancers, promoters, insulators, silencers and locus control regions. Here we present the first extensive map of human DHSs identified through genome-wide profiling in 125 diverse cell and tissue types. We identify ∼2.9 million DHSs that encompass virtually all known experimentally validated cis-regulatory sequences and expose a vast trove of novel elements, most with highly cell-selective regulation. Annotating these elements using ENCODE data reveals novel relationships between chromatin accessibility, transcription, DNA methylation and regulatory factor occupancy patterns. We connect ∼580,000 distal DHSs with their target promoters, revealing systematic pairing of different classes of distal DHSs and specific promoter types. Patterning of chromatin accessibility at many regulatory regions is organized with dozens to hundreds of co-activated elements, and the transcellular DNase I sensitivity pattern at a given region can predict cell-type-specific functional behaviours. The DHS landscape shows signatures of recent functional evolutionary constraint. However, the DHS compartment in pluripotent and immortalized cells exhibits higher mutation rates than that in highly differentiated cells, exposing an unexpected link between chromatin accessibility, proliferative potential and patterns of human variation. An extensive map of human DNase I hypersensitive sites, markers of regulatory DNA, in 125 diverse cell and tissue types is described; integration of this information with other ENCODE-generated data sets identifies new relationships between chromatin accessibility, transcription, DNA methylation and regulatory factor occupancy patterns. This paper describes the first extensive map of human DNaseI hypersensitive sites — markers of regulatory DNA — in 125 diverse cell and tissue types. Integration of this information with other data sets generated by ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements) identified new relationships between chromatin accessibility, transcription, DNA methylation and regulatory-factor occupancy patterns. Evolutionary-conservation analysis revealed signatures of recent functional constraint within DNaseI hypersensitive sites.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
489
Issue :
7414
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....da56ebb6aa2cdaea3cab090e978eef42