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Analysis of Genetically Diverse Macrophages Reveals Local and Domain-wide Mechanisms that Control Transcription Factor Binding and Function.

Citation
Link, V. M., et al. “Analysis Of Genetically Diverse Macrophages Reveals Local And Domain-Wide Mechanisms That Control Transcription Factor Binding And Function.”. Cell, pp. 1796-1809.e17.
Center UCSD-UCLA
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Author Verena M Link, Sascha H Duttke, Hyun B Chun, Inge R Holtman, Emma Westin, Marten A Hoeksema, Yohei Abe, Dylan Skola, Casey E Romanoski, Jenhan Tao, Gregory J Fonseca, Ty D Troutman, Nathanael J Spann, Tobias Strid, Mashito Sakai, Miao Yu, Rong Hu, Rongxin Fang, Dirk Metzler, Bing Ren, Christopher K Glass
Keywords chromatin structure, cis-regulatory domains, enhancer landscape, gene expression, genetic variation, macrophages, transcription factor binding
Abstract

Non-coding genetic variation is a major driver of phenotypic diversity and allows the investigation of mechanisms that control gene expression. Here, we systematically investigated the effects of >50 million variations from five strains of mice on mRNA, nascent transcription, transcription start sites, and transcription factor binding in resting and activated macrophages. We observed substantial differences associated with distinct molecular pathways. Evaluating genetic variation provided evidence for roles of ∼100 TFs in shaping lineage-determining factor binding. Unexpectedly, a substantial fraction of strain-specific factor binding could not be explained by local mutations. Integration of genomic features with chromatin interaction data provided evidence for hundreds of connected cis-regulatory domains associated with differences in transcription factor binding and gene expression. This system and the >250 datasets establish a substantial new resource for investigation of how genetic variation affects cellular phenotypes.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell
Volume
173
Issue
7
Number of Pages
1796-1809.e17
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2018.04.018
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
29779944
PMCID
PMC6003872
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