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Prediction of Gene Activity in Early B Cell Development Based on an Integrative Multi-Omics Analysis.
Heydarian, Mohammad; Luperchio, Teresa Romeo; Cutler, Jevon; Mitchell, Christopher J; Kim, Min-Sik; Pandey, Akhilesh; Sollner-Webb, Barbara; Reddy, Karen.
Afiliação
  • Heydarian M; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, Center for Epigenetics, 855 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA.
  • Luperchio TR; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, Center for Epigenetics, 855 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA.
  • Cutler J; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, Center for Epigenetics, 855 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, 733 North, Broadway Avenue, Balt
  • Mitchell CJ; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, 733 North, Broadway Avenue, Baltimore, USA.
  • Kim MS; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, 733 North, Broadway Avenue, Baltimore, USA.
  • Pandey A; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, 733 North, Broadway Avenue, Baltimore, USA.
  • Sollner-Webb B; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA.
  • Reddy K; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Biological Chemistry, 725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA ; Johns Hopkins University, Center for Epigenetics, 855 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, USA.
J Proteomics Bioinform ; 72014 Feb 17.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25544807
ABSTRACT
An increasingly common method for predicting gene activity is genome-wide chromatin immuno-precipitation of 'active' chromatin modifications followed by massively parallel sequencing (ChIP-seq). In order to understand better the relationship between developmentally regulated chromatin landscapes and regulation of early B cell development, we determined how differentially active promoter regions were able to predict relative RNA and protein levels at the pre-pro-B and pro-B stages. Herein, we describe a novel ChIP-seq quantification method (cRPKM) to identify active promoters and a multi-omics approach that compares promoter chromatin status with ongoing active transcription (GRO-seq), steady state mRNA (RNA-seq), inferred mRNA stability, and relative proteome abundance measurements (iTRAQ). We demonstrate that active chromatin modifications at promoters are good indicators of transcription and steady state mRNA levels. Moreover, we found that promoters with active chromatin modifications exclusively in one of these cell states frequently predicted the differential abundance of proteins. However, we found that many genes whose promoters have non-differential but active chromatin modifications also displayed changes in abundance of their cognate proteins. As expected, this large class of developmentally and differentially regulated proteins that was uncoupled from chromatin status used mostly post-transcriptional mechanisms. Strikingly, the most differentially abundant protein in our B-cell development system, 2410004B18Rik, was regulated by a post-transcriptional mechanism, which further analyses indicated was mediated by a micro-RNA. These data highlight how this integrated multi-omics data set can be a useful resource in uncovering regulatory mechanisms. This data can be accessed at https//usegalaxy.org/u/thereddylab/p/prediction-of-gene-activity-based-on-an-integrative-multi-omics-analysis.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2014 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2014 Tipo de documento: Article