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    The long-range interaction landscape of gene promoters

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    Authors
    Sanyal, Amartya
    Lajoie, Bryan R.
    Jain, Gaurav
    Dekker, Job
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology
    Program in Systems Biology
    Program in Gene Function and Expression
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2012-09-06
    Keywords
    Promoter Regions, Genetic
    Genetics and Genomics
    Molecular Biology
    
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    Link to Full Text
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11279
    Abstract
    The vast non-coding portion of the human genome is full of functional elements and disease-causing regulatory variants. The principles defining the relationships between these elements and distal target genes remain unknown. Promoters and distal elements can engage in looping interactions that have been implicated in gene regulation. Here we have applied chromosome conformation capture carbon copy (5C) to interrogate comprehensively interactions between transcription start sites (TSSs) and distal elements in 1% of the human genome representing the ENCODE pilot project regions. 5C maps were generated for GM12878, K562 and HeLa-S3 cells and results were integrated with data from the ENCODE consortium. In each cell line we discovered >1,000 long-range interactions between promoters and distal sites that include elements resembling enhancers, promoters and CTCF-bound sites. We observed significant correlations between gene expression, promoter-enhancer interactions and the presence of enhancer RNAs. Long-range interactions show marked asymmetry with a bias for interactions with elements located approximately 120 kilobases upstream of the TSS. Long-range interactions are often not blocked by sites bound by CTCF and cohesin, indicating that many of these sites do not demarcate physically insulated gene domains. Furthermore, only approximately 7% of looping interactions are with the nearest gene, indicating that genomic proximity is not a simple predictor for long-range interactions. Finally, promoters and distal elements are engaged in multiple long-range interactions to form complex networks. Our results start to place genes and regulatory elements in three-dimensional context, revealing their functional relationships.
    Source

    Nature. 2012 Sep 6;489(7414):109-13. doi: 10.1038/nature11279. Link to article on publisher's site

    DOI
    10.1038/nature11279
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/43998
    PubMed ID
    22955621
    Related Resources
    Link to Article in PubMed
    Rights

    This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).

    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1038/nature11279
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