An atlas of active enhancers across human cell types and tissues
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Gebhard, Claudia
Miguel-Escalada, Irene
Hoof, Ilka
Bornholdt, Jette
Boyd, Mette
Chen, Yun
Zhao, Xiaobei
Schmidl, Christian
Suzuki, Takahiro
Ntini, Evgenia
Arner, Erik
Valen, Eivind
Li, Kang
Schwarzfischer, Lucia
Glatz, Dagmar
Raithel, Johanna
Lilje, Berit
Rapin, Nicolas
Bagger, Frederik Otzen
Jorgensen, Mette
Andersen, Peter Refsing
Bertin, Nicolas
Rackham, Owen
Burroughs, A Maxwell
Baillie, J Kenneth
Ishizu, Yuri
Shimizu, Yuri
Furuhata, Erina
Maeda, Shiori
Negishi, Yutaka
Mungall, Christopher J
Meehan, Terrence F
Lassmann, Timo
Itoh, Masayoshi
Kawaji, Hideya
Kondo, Naoto
Kawai, Jun
Lennartsson, Andreas
Daub, Carsten O
Heutink, Peter
Hume, David A
Jensen, Torben Heick
Suzuki, Harukazu
Hayashizaki, Yoshihide
Mueller, Ferenc
Forrest, Alistair RR
Carninci, Piero
Rehli, Michael
Sandelin, Albin
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Abstract
Enhancers control the correct temporal and cell-type-specific activation of gene expression in multicellular eukaryotes. Knowing their properties, regulatory activity and targets is crucial to understand the regulation of differentiation and homeostasis. Here we use the FANTOM5 panel of samples, covering the majority of human tissues and cell types, to produce an atlas of active, in vivo-transcribed enhancers. We show that enhancers share properties with CpG-poor messenger RNA promoters but produce bidirectional, exosome-sensitive, relatively short unspliced RNAs, the generation of which is strongly related to enhancer activity. The atlas is used to compare regulatory programs between different cells at unprecedented depth, to identify disease-associated regulatory single nucleotide polymorphisms, and to classify cell-type-specific and ubiquitous enhancers. We further explore the utility of enhancer redundancy, which explains gene expression strength rather than expression patterns. The online FANTOM5 enhancer atlas represents a unique resource for studies on cell-type-specific enhancers and gene regulation.
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Nature
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507
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© 2014 Nature Publishing Group. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.
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Science, technology and engineering curriculum and pedagogy