1. Comprehensive analysis of the chromatin landscape in Drosophila melanogaster
- Author
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David M. MacAlpine, Michael Y. Tolstorukov, Mitzi I. Kuroda, Vincenzo Pirrotta, Peter J. Sabo, Lovelace J. Luquette, Aki Minoda, Youngsook L. Jung, Robert E. Thurman, Annette Plachetka, Nicole C. Riddle, Sarah C. R. Elgin, Erica Larschan, Gregory A. Shanower, Manolis Kellis, Andrey A. Gorchakov, Eric P. Bishop, Gary H. Karpen, John A. Stamatoyannopoulos, Jason Ernst, Peter V. Kharchenko, Richard W. Park, Theresa K. Canfield, Richard Sandstrom, Daniela Linder-Basso, Ruibin Xi, Tingting Gu, Artyom A. Alekseyenko, Peter J. Park, Yuri B. Schwartz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Ernst, Jason, and Kellis, Manolis
- Subjects
Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Histone-modifying enzymes ,Multidisciplinary ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Chromatin remodeling ,Chromatin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Histone code ,DNase I hypersensitive site ,Scaffold/matrix attachment region ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,ChIA-PET ,030304 developmental biology ,Epigenomics - Abstract
Chromatin is composed of DNA and a variety of modified histones and non-histone proteins, which have an impact on cell differentiation, gene regulation and other key cellular processes. Here we present a genome-wide chromatin landscape for Drosophila melanogaster based on eighteen histone modifications, summarized by nine prevalent combinatorial patterns. Integrative analysis with other data (non-histone chromatin proteins, DNase I hypersensitivity, GRO-Seq reads produced by engaged polymerase, short/long RNA products) reveals discrete characteristics of chromosomes, genes, regulatory elements and other functional domains. We find that active genes display distinct chromatin signatures that are correlated with disparate gene lengths, exon patterns, regulatory functions and genomic contexts. We also demonstrate a diversity of signatures among Polycomb targets that include a subset with paused polymerase. This systematic profiling and integrative analysis of chromatin signatures provides insights into how genomic elements are regulated, and will serve as a resource for future experimental investigations of genome structure and function., United States. Dept. of Energy (Contract DE-AC02-05CH11231), RC2 HG005639, U01 HG004279, R01 GM082798, R37 GM45744, R01 GM071923, U54 HG004592, National Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF 0905968)
- Published
- 2010
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