MACE: model based analysis of ChIP-exo

Liguo Wang(Baylor College of Medicine), Junsheng Chen(Tongji University), Chen Wang(Mayo Clinic), Liis Uusküla-Reimand(SickKids Foundation), Kaifu Chen(Baylor College of Medicine), Alejandra Medina-Rivera(SickKids Foundation), Edwin J. Young(SickKids Foundation), Michael T. Zimmermann(Mayo Clinic), Huihuang Yan(Mayo Clinic), Zhifu Sun(Mayo Clinic), Yuji Zhang(Mayo Clinic), Stephen Wu(Mayo Clinic), Haojie Huang(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Michael D. Wilson(University of Toronto), Jean‐Pierre Kocher(Mayo Clinic), Wei Li(Baylor College of Medicine)
Nucleic Acids Research
September 23, 2014
Cited by 91Open Access
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Abstract

Understanding the role of a given transcription factor (TF) in regulating gene expression requires precise mapping of its binding sites in the genome. Chromatin immunoprecipitation-exo, an emerging technique using λ exonuclease to digest TF unbound DNA after ChIP, is designed to reveal transcription factor binding site (TFBS) boundaries with near-single nucleotide resolution. Although ChIP-exo promises deeper insights into transcription regulation, no dedicated bioinformatics tool exists to leverage its advantages. Most ChIP-seq and ChIP-chip analytic methods are not tailored for ChIP-exo, and thus cannot take full advantage of high-resolution ChIP-exo data. Here we describe a novel analysis framework, termed MACE (model-based analysis of ChIP-exo) dedicated to ChIP-exo data analysis. The MACE workflow consists of four steps: (i) sequencing data normalization and bias correction; (ii) signal consolidation and noise reduction; (iii) single-nucleotide resolution border peak detection using the Chebyshev Inequality and (iv) border matching using the Gale-Shapley stable matching algorithm. When applied to published human CTCF, yeast Reb1 and our own mouse ONECUT1/HNF6 ChIP-exo data, MACE is able to define TFBSs with high sensitivity, specificity and spatial resolution, as evidenced by multiple criteria including motif enrichment, sequence conservation, direct sequence pileup, nucleosome positioning and open chromatin states. In addition, we show that the fundamental advance of MACE is the identification of two boundaries of a TFBS with high resolution, whereas other methods only report a single location of the same event. The two boundaries help elucidate the in vivo binding structure of a given TF, e.g. whether the TF may bind as dimers or in a complex with other co-factors.


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