Discovery and Characterization of Human Exonic Transcriptional Regulatory Elements

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Abstract

We sought exonic transcriptional regulatory elements by shotgun cloning human cDNA fragments into luciferase reporter vectors and measuring the resulting expression levels in liver cells. We uncovered seven regulatory elements within coding regions and three within 3' untranslated regions (UTRs). Two of the putative regulatory elements were enhancers and eight were silencers. The regulatory elements were generally but not consistently evolutionarily conserved and also showed a trend toward decreased population diversity. Furthermore, the exonic regulatory elements were enriched in known transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) and were associated with several histone modifications and transcriptionally relevant chromatin. Evidence was obtained for bidirectional cis-regulation of a coding region element within a tubulin gene, TUBA1B, by the transcription factors PPARA and RORA. We estimate that hundreds of exonic transcriptional regulatory elements exist, an unexpected finding that highlights a surprising multi-functionality of sequences in the human genome. © 2012 Khan et al.

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APA

Khan, A. H., Lin, A., & Smith, D. J. (2012). Discovery and Characterization of Human Exonic Transcriptional Regulatory Elements. PLoS ONE, 7(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0046098

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