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Current Topics in Genomics and Epigenomics – Lecture 2. The cis regulatory elements. Transcription Process in Eukaryotes. Transcription in Eukaryotes. Takes place in the nucleus The lower strand is used as template RNA is made from 5’ to 3’ direction Multiple steps
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Current Topics in Genomics and Epigenomics – Lecture 2 The cis regulatory elements
Transcription in Eukaryotes • Takes place in the nucleus • The lower strand is used as template • RNA is made from 5’ to 3’ direction • Multiple steps • Class II genes are transcribed by RNAP2 and requires post-transcriptional processing
The 5´ Capping • Process: • A GTP is attached to the 5´ end via a 5´-5´ bond (Enzyme:Guanyltransferase) • First few nucleotides (including GTP at N#7) are methylated (Enzyme: Guanine- methyltransferase) • Effects: • Facilitates splicing • Stabilizes the mRNA transcript • Facilitates transport of mRNA to cytoplasm • Recognition by ribosomes in translation
Splicing RNA branch point • Splicing and lariat formationvia successive trans-esterification reactions • Two exons are ligated, intron is released as a branched lariat molecule
Transcriptional initiation • RNAPII loading to promoters requires general transcription factors (GTF)
Transcriptional regulatory elements and their mechanisms of action
cis-regulatory elements in the genome Insulator (Enhancer blocking) Insulator (Barrier) Promoter Enhancer Insulator (Barrier) Silencing element
Promoters • Promoters are where transcription initiates • Many promoter elements have been found • TATA box was discovered in 1979 by comparison of a number of mRNA start sites
How to Locate promoters in the human genome? Cap Analysis of Gene Expression • Determine the full length transcripts and align to the genome
crosslink sonicate Chromatin IP input LM-PCR label Hybridize to microarray How to Locate promoters in the human genome? • Determine the full length transcripts and align to the genome • Locate promoters based on binding sites of the pre-initiation complex • ChIP-based analysis is a general approach for mapping transcription factor binding sites
Locate promoters in the human genome crosslink sonicate • Locate promoters based on binding sites of the pre-initiation complex • ChIP-chip analysis is a general approach for mapping transcription factor binding sites • ChIP-seq provides a more cost-effective, genome-wide approach Chromatin IP input
Locate promoters in the human genome - Kim et al., Nature 2005
Sequence features of promoters • CpG island is associated with nearly 80% of the promoters • TATA box is not a general feature of human promoters • Other sequence elements exists
cis-regulatory elements in the genome Insulator (Enhancer blocking) Insulator (Barrier) Promoter Enhancer Insulator (Barrier) Silencing element
Promoter Enhancers Levine M; Small S.
A cis regulatory element of Shh Enhancer Preaxialpolydactyly Lettice et al., Hum Mol Gen 2003, 12 (14) pp. 1725-35 Lettice et al, Proc NatlAcadSci USA 2002 vol. 99 (11) pp. 7548-53
RNAP RNAP Model of enhancer function Coactivators
p300 is a transcriptional co-activator -- www.web-books.com/ MoBio/Free/Ch4G2.htm
Locating enhancers by mapping the p300 binding sites Visel et al., Nature 2009 Z. Li in collaboration with Visel, Pennachio, and Rubin @ LBNL
Confirmation of enhancer activities of the p300 binding sites in transgenic mouse embryos • 53/67 (79%) forebrain predictions, 28/34 (82%) midbrain predictions and 20/25 (82%) limb predictions were active in vivo enhancers at e11.5 Visel et al., Nature 2009
cis-regulatory elements in the genome Insulator (Enhancer blocking) Insulator (Barrier) Promoter Enhancer Insulator (Barrier) Silencing element
Barrier Elements Gaszner and Felsenfeld Nature Reviews Genetics advance online publication; published online 15 August 2006 | doi:10.1038/nrg1925
Gaszner and Felsenfeld Nature Reviews Genetics advance online publication; published online 15 August 2006 | doi:10.1038/nrg1925
Gaszner and Felsenfeld Nature Reviews Genetics advance online publication; published online 15 August 2006 | doi:10.1038/nrg1925
The ENCODE (ENCyclopedia Of DNA Elements) Project • The ENCODE Project was launched in 2003 • Goal: Identify candidate functional elements in the human genome. Produce large scale datasets for public access. • Three phases • Pilot phase (2003-2007) – develop high throughput methods, focusing on 1% of genome • Production phase (2007 – 2012) – ramping up to genome-wide, focusing on a limited number of cell lines; model organisms (worm, fly and mouse) were also included. • Full production phase (2012 – 2016),just launched, aimed for comprehensive analysis. http: //www.genome.gov/ENCODE
The ENCODE (ENCyclopedia Of DNA Elements) Project Cis regulatory sequences Genes & Transcripts Myers et al., PLoS Biol. 2011 vol. 9 (4) pp. e1001046
ChIP-seq Zhang et al. Genome Biol 2008 crosslink sonicate Chromatin IP input
Annotating cis-elements from ChIP-seq data of Transcription factor binding
DNase-seq Song & Crawford, Cold Spring HarbProtoc 2010
Chromatin State and accessibility in human DNA measured by ChIP-seq and DNase-Seq
>80% of the genome participates in one or more biochemical event (making RNA, binding TFs, etc) in at least one cell type; • Defined 399,124 regions with enhancer-like features and 70,292 regions with promoter-like features • 4.5 million Dnase I hypersensitive sites defined • Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with disease by GWAS are enriched within non-coding functional elements Ecker J, Nature 2012, 489:53