Modern genomics technologies generate huge data sets creating a demand for systems level, experimentally verified, analysis techniques. We examined the transcriptional response to DNA damage in a human T cell line (MOLT4) using microarrays. By measuring both mRNA accumulation and degradation over a short time course, we were able to construct a mechanistic model of the transcriptional response. The model predicted three dominant transcriptional activity profilesan early response controlled by NFκB and c-Jun, a delayed response controlled by p53, and a late response related to cell cycle re-entry. The method also identified, with defined confidence limits, the transcriptional targets associated with each activity. Experimental inhibition of NFκB, c-Jun and p53 confirmed that target predictions were accurate. Model predictions directly explained 70% of the 200 most significantly upregulated genes in the DNA-damage response. Genome-wide transcriptional modelling (GWTM) requires no prior knowledge of either transcription factors or their targets. GWTM is an economical and effective method for identifying the main transcriptional activators in a complex response and confidently predicting their targets. © 2009 EMBO and Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Barenco, M., Brewer, D., Papouli, E., Tomescu, D., Callard, R., Stark, J., & Hubank, M. (2009). Dissection of a complex transcriptional response using genome-wide transcriptional modelling. Molecular Systems Biology, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2009.84
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