Gene expression during development and differentiation is regulated in a cell- and stage-specific manner by complex networks of intergenic and intragenic cis-regulatory elements whose numbers and representation in the genome far exceed those of structural genes. Using chromosome conformation capture, it is now possible to analyze in detail the interaction between enhancers, silencers, boundary elements and promoters at individual loci, but these techniques are not readily scalable. Here we present a high-throughput approach (Capture-C) to analyze cis interactions, interrogating hundreds of specific interactions at high resolution in a single experiment. We show how this approach will facilitate detailed, genome-wide analysis to elucidate the general principles by which cis-acting sequences control gene expression. In addition, we show how Capture-C will expedite identification of the target genes and functional effects of SNPs that are associated with complex diseases, which most frequently lie in intergenic cis-acting regulatory elements.
Journal article
Nat Genet
02/2014
46
205 - 212
Animals, Base Sequence, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Gene Library, Genetic Diseases, Inborn, High-Throughput Screening Assays, Humans, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Regulatory Elements, Transcriptional, Sequence Analysis, DNA