Login

Extensive characterization of NF-κB binding uncovers non-canonical motifs and advances the interpretation of genetic functional traits

Show full item record




Title: Extensive characterization of NF-κB binding uncovers non-canonical motifs and advances the interpretation of genetic functional traits
Author: Wong, Daniel; Teixeira, Ana; Oikonomopoulos, Spyros; Humburg, Peter; Lone, Imtiaz; Saliba, David; Siggers, Trevor; Bulyk, Martha; Angelov, Dimitar; Dimitrov, Stefan; Udalova, Irina A; Ragoussis, Jiannis
Department: Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Publisher: BioMed Central Ltd.
Issue Date: 2011-07
Abstract: Background Genetic studies have provided ample evidence of the influence of non-coding DNA polymorphisms on trait variance, particularly those occurring within transcription factor binding sites. Protein binding microarrays and other platforms that can map these sites with great precision have enhanced our understanding of how a single nucleotide polymorphism can alter binding potential within an in vitro setting, allowing for greater predictive capability of its effect on a transcription factor binding site. Results We have used protein binding microarrays and electrophoretic mobility shift assay-sequencing (EMSA-Seq), a deep sequencing based method we developed to analyze nine distinct human NF-κB dimers. This family of transcription factors is one of the most extensively studied, but our understanding of its DNA binding preferences has been limited to the originally described consensus motif, GGRRNNYYCC. We highlight differences between NF-κB family members and also put under the spotlight non-canonical motifs that have so far received little attention. We utilize our data to interpret the binding of transcription factors between individuals across 1,405 genomic regions laden with single nucleotide polymorphisms. We also associated binding correlations made using our data with risk alleles of disease and demonstrate its utility as a tool for functional studies of single nucleotide polymorphisms in regulatory regions. Conclusions NF-κB dimers bind specifically to non-canonical motifs and these can be found within genomic regions in which a canonical motif is not evident. Binding affinity data generated with these different motifs can be used in conjunction with data from chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing (ChIP-Seq) to enable allele-specific analyses of expression and transcription factor-DNA interactions on a genome-wide scale.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/69817
ISSN: 1465-6906
1474-7596
Citation: Wong, Daniel et al. “Extensive Characterization of NF-κB Binding Uncovers Non-canonical Motifs and Advances the Interpretation of Genetic Functional Traits.” Genome Biology 12.7 (2011): R70.
Version: Final published version
Terms of Use: Creative Commons Attribution
Detailed Terms: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0
Published as: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2011-12-7-r70
Journal: Genome Biology

Files in this item

Files Size Format
Downloadable Full Text - application/pdf

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Creative Commons Attribution Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution

Search DSpace@MIT


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Links