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Enhancer connectome in primary human cells identifies target genes of disease-associated DNA elements.

Authors :
Mumbach MR
Satpathy AT
Boyle EA
Dai C
Gowen BG
Cho SW
Nguyen ML
Rubin AJ
Granja JM
Kazane KR
Wei Y
Nguyen T
Greenside PG
Corces MR
Tycko J
Simeonov DR
Suliman N
Li R
Xu J
Flynn RA
Kundaje A
Khavari PA
Marson A
Corn JE
Quertermous T
Greenleaf WJ
Chang HY
Source :
Nature genetics [Nat Genet] 2017 Nov; Vol. 49 (11), pp. 1602-1612. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Sep 25.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The challenge of linking intergenic mutations to target genes has limited molecular understanding of human diseases. Here we show that H3K27ac HiChIP generates high-resolution contact maps of active enhancers and target genes in rare primary human T cell subtypes and coronary artery smooth muscle cells. Differentiation of naive T cells into T helper 17 cells or regulatory T cells creates subtype-specific enhancer-promoter interactions, specifically at regions of shared DNA accessibility. These data provide a principled means of assigning molecular functions to autoimmune and cardiovascular disease risk variants, linking hundreds of noncoding variants to putative gene targets. Target genes identified with HiChIP are further supported by CRISPR interference and activation at linked enhancers, by the presence of expression quantitative trait loci, and by allele-specific enhancer loops in patient-derived primary cells. The majority of disease-associated enhancers contact genes beyond the nearest gene in the linear genome, leading to a fourfold increase in the number of potential target genes for autoimmune and cardiovascular diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-1718
Volume :
49
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28945252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3963