Tsukuba, Japan—The diverse characteristics of the human body's various cells are reflected in their gene expression patterns. The regulation of such gene expression is based on transcription factors that bind to specific sequences in the genome. The elucidation of unique transcription factor-binding sequences for each cell type is pivotal in unraveling the regulatory mechanisms governing gene expression within these cell types. Nonetheless, a comprehensive understanding of transcription factor-binding sequences, encompassing commonalities and variations across transcription factor types and cell types, remains elusive.
Using data concerning the binding sites of numerous human transcription factors, the research team has developed "MOCCS profiles", a novel data representation for transcription factor-binding sequences and analyzed binding sequences across various transcription factors and cell types. Their findings reveal that approximately half of the examined transcription factors possess distinct binding sequences for specific cell types. Moreover, utilizing the MOCCS profiles, the researchers developed an index to predict the effect of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on DNA binding of transcription factors and showed that the effect of disease-related SNPs on transcription factor binding can be appropriately evaluated from the perspective of transcription factors and cell types.
The MOCCS profiles hold vast potential for various applications such as combining with epigenomic data to decipher cell type-specific gene expression regulatory mechanisms and evaluating the impact of somatic mutations in cancer cells on the binding of transcription factors.
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This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (grant numbers JP19K24361 and JP20K19915). H.O. was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (grant numbers JP19H03696, JP19K20394, and 22K17992) and AMED Moonshot Research and Development Program (A3I03313).
Title of original paper:
Transcription factor-binding k -mer analysis clarifies the cell type dependency of binding specificities and cis-regulatory SNPs in humans
Journal:
BMC Genomics
DOI:
10.1186/s12864-023-09692-9
Associate Professor OZAKI Haruka
Institute of Medicine, University of Tsukuba
Institute of Medicine
Center for Artificial Intelligence Research
BMC Genomics
Transcription factor-binding k-mer analysis clarifies the cell type dependency of binding specificities and cis-regulatory SNPs in humans
7-Oct-2023