Genome-wide discovery of human heart enhancers
- 14 January 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 20 (3) , 381-392
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.098657.109
Abstract
The various organogenic programs deployed during embryonic development rely on the precise expression of a multitude of genes in time and space. Identifying the cis-regulatory elements responsible for this tightly orchestrated regulation of gene expression is an essential step in understanding the genetic pathways involved in development. We describe a strategy to systematically identify tissue-specific cis-regulatory elements that share combinations of sequence motifs. Using heart development as an experimental framework, we employed a combination of Gibbs sampling and linear regression to build a classifier that identifies heart enhancers based on the presence and/or absence of various sequence features, including known and putative transcription factor (TF) binding specificities. In distinguishing heart enhancers from a large pool of random noncoding sequences, the performance of our classifier is vastly superior to four commonly used methods, with an accuracy reaching 92% in cross-validation. Furthermore, most of the binding specificities learned by our method resemble the specificities of TFs widely recognized as key players in heart development and differentiation, such as SRF, MEF2, ETS1, SMAD, and GATA. Using our classifier as a predictor, a genome-wide scan identified over 40,000 novel human heart enhancers. Although the classifier used no gene expression information, these novel enhancers are strongly associated with genes expressed in the heart. Finally, in vivo tests of our predictions in mouse and zebrafish achieved a validation rate of 62%, significantly higher than what is expected by chance. These results support the existence of underlying cis-regulatory codes dictating tissue-specific transcription in mammalian genomes and validate our enhancer classifier strategy as a method to uncover these regulatory codes.This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- Histone modifications at human enhancers reflect global cell-type-specific gene expressionNature, 2009
- ChIP-seq accurately predicts tissue-specific activity of enhancersNature, 2009
- Combinatorial Regulation of Endothelial Gene Expression by Ets and Forkhead Transcription FactorsCell, 2008
- Predicting expression patterns from regulatory sequence in Drosophila segmentationNature, 2008
- A high-resolution atlas of nucleosome occupancy in yeastNature Genetics, 2007
- Genome-wide profiles of STAT1 DNA association using chromatin immunoprecipitation and massively parallel sequencingNature Methods, 2007
- In vivo enhancer analysis of human conserved non-coding sequencesNature, 2006
- Combinatorial function of ETS transcription factors in the developing vasculatureDevelopmental Biology, 2006
- Evaluating the biological relevance of putative enhancers using Tol2 transposon-mediated transgenesis in zebrafishNature Protocols, 2006
- Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafishDevelopmental Dynamics, 1995