High-throughput localization of functional elements by quantitative chromatin profiling

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Abstract

Identification of functional, noncoding elements that regulate transcription in the context of complex genomes is a major goal of modern biology. Localization of functionality to specific sequences is a requirement for genetic and computational studies. Here, we describe a generic approach, quantitative chromatin profiling, that uses quantitative analysis of in vivo chromatin structure over entire gene loci to rapidly and precisely localize cis-regulatory sequences and other functional modalities encoded by DNase I hypersensitive sites. To demonstrate the accuracy of this approach, we analyzed B300 kilobases of human genome sequence from diverse gene loci and cleanly delineated functional elements corresponding to a spectrum of classical cis-regulatory activities including enhancers, promoters, locus control regions and insulators as well as novel elements. Systematic, highthroughput identification of functional elements coinciding with DNase I hypersensitive sites will substantially expand our knowledge of transcriptional regulation and should simplify the search for noncoding genetic variation with phenotypic consequences. © 2004 Nature Publishing Group.

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Dorschner, M. O., Hawrylycz, M., Humbert, R., Wallace, J. C., Shafer, A., Kawamoto, J., … Stamatoyannopoulos, J. A. (2004). High-throughput localization of functional elements by quantitative chromatin profiling. Nature Methods, 1(3), 219–225. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth721

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