The ModERN Resource: Genome-Wide Binding Profiles for Hundreds of<i>Drosophila</i>and<i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>Transcription Factors

Michelle Kudron(Yale University), Alec Victorsen(Yale University), Louis Gevirtzman(University of Washington), LaDeana Hillier(University of Washington), William W. Fisher(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Dionne Vafeados(University of Washington), Matt Kirkey(University of Chicago), Ann S. Hammonds(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Jeffery Gersch(University of Chicago), Haneen Ammouri(University of Chicago), Martha Wall(University of Chicago), Jennifer Moran(University of Chicago), David L. Steffen(University of Chicago), Matt Szynkarek(University of Chicago), Samantha Seabrook-Sturgis(University of Chicago), Nader Jameel(University of Chicago), Madhura Kadaba(University of Chicago), Jaeda Patton(University of Washington), Robert Terrell(University of Washington), Mitch Corson(University of Washington), Timothy Durham(University of Washington), Soo Hyung Park(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Swapna Samanta(Yale University), Mei Han(Yale University), Jinrui Xu(Yale University), Koon‐Kiu Yan(Yale University), S Celniker(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Kevin P. White(University of Chicago), Lijia Ma(University of Chicago), Mark Gerstein(Yale University), V Reinke(Yale University), R Waterston(University of Washington)
Genetics
December 28, 2017
Cited by 257Open Access
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Abstract

, the modERN (model organism Encyclopedia of Regulatory Networks) consortium has systematically assayed the binding sites of transcription factors (TFs). Combined with data produced by our predecessor, modENCODE (Model Organism ENCyclopedia Of DNA Elements), we now have data for 262 TFs identifying 1.23 M sites in the fly genome and 217 TFs identifying 0.67 M sites in the worm genome. Because sites from different TFs are often overlapping and tightly clustered, they fall into 91,011 and 59,150 regions in the fly and worm, respectively, and these binding sites span as little as 8.7 and 5.8 Mb in the two organisms. Clusters with large numbers of sites (so-called high occupancy target, or HOT regions) predominantly associate with broadly expressed genes, whereas clusters containing sites from just a few factors are associated with genes expressed in tissue-specific patterns. All of the strains expressing GFP-tagged TFs are available at the stock centers, and the chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing data are available through the ENCODE Data Coordinating Center and also through a simple interface (http://epic.gs.washington.edu/modERN/) that facilitates rapid accessibility of processed data sets. These data will facilitate a vast number of scientific inquiries into the function of individual TFs in key developmental, metabolic, and defense and homeostatic regulatory pathways, as well as provide a broader perspective on how individual TFs work together in local networks and globally across the life spans of these two key model organisms.


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