Mysteries of gene regulation: Promoters are not the sole triggers of gene expression

Chi-Nga Chow(National Cheng Kung University), Kuan-Chieh Tseng(National Cheng Kung University), Pingfu Hou(Council of Agriculture), Nai-Yun Wu(National Cheng Kung University), Tzong-Yi Lee(Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen), Wen‐Chi Chang(National Cheng Kung University)
Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
January 1, 2022
Cited by 7Open Access
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Abstract

Cis-regulatory elements of promoters are essential for gene regulation by transcription factors (TFs). However, the regulatory roles of nonpromoter regions, TFs, and epigenetic marks remain poorly understood in plants. In this study, we characterized the cis-regulatory regions of 53 TFs and 19 histone marks in 328 chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP-seq) datasets from Arabidopsis. The genome-wide maps indicated that both promoters and regions around the transcription termination sites of protein-coding genes recruit the most TFs. The maps also revealed a diverse of histone combinations. The analysis suggested that exons play critical roles in the regulation of non-coding genes. Additionally, comparative analysis between heat-stress-responsive and nonresponsive genes indicated that the genes with distinct functions also exhibited substantial differences in cis-regulatory regions, histone regulation, and topologically associating domain (TAD) boundary organization. By integrating multiple high-throughput sequencing datasets, this study generated regulatory models for protein-coding genes, non-coding genes, and TAD boundaries to explain the complexity of transcriptional regulation.


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