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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(3): 900-908, 2019 01 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30598455

ABSTRACT

Identifying functional enhancer elements in metazoan systems is a major challenge. Large-scale validation of enhancers predicted by ENCODE reveal false-positive rates of at least 70%. We used the pregrastrula-patterning network of Drosophila melanogaster to demonstrate that loss in accuracy in held-out data results from heterogeneity of functional signatures in enhancer elements. We show that at least two classes of enhancers are active during early Drosophila embryogenesis and that by focusing on a single, relatively homogeneous class of elements, greater than 98% prediction accuracy can be achieved in a balanced, completely held-out test set. The class of well-predicted elements is composed predominantly of enhancers driving multistage segmentation patterns, which we designate segmentation driving enhancers (SDE). Prediction is driven by the DNA occupancy of early developmental transcription factors, with almost no additional power derived from histone modifications. We further show that improved accuracy is not a property of a particular prediction method: after conditioning on the SDE set, naïve Bayes and logistic regression perform as well as more sophisticated tools. Applying this method to a genome-wide scan, we predict 1,640 SDEs that cover 1.6% of the genome. An analysis of 32 SDEs using whole-mount embryonic imaging of stably integrated reporter constructs chosen throughout our prediction rank-list showed >90% drove expression patterns. We achieved 86.7% precision on a genome-wide scan, with an estimated recall of at least 98%, indicating high accuracy and completeness in annotating this class of functional elements.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Embryonic Development/physiology , Enhancer Elements, Genetic/physiology , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Transcription Factors , Animals , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster , Genome-Wide Association Study , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism
2.
PLoS Genet ; 7(10): e1002346, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22046143

ABSTRACT

Differences in the level, timing, or location of gene expression can contribute to alternative phenotypes at the molecular and organismal level. Understanding the origins of expression differences is complicated by the fact that organismal morphology and gene regulatory networks could potentially vary even between closely related species. To assess the scope of such changes, we used high-resolution imaging methods to measure mRNA expression in blastoderm embryos of Drosophila yakuba and Drosophila pseudoobscura and assembled these data into cellular resolution atlases, where expression levels for 13 genes in the segmentation network are averaged into species-specific, cellular resolution morphological frameworks. We demonstrate that the blastoderm embryos of these species differ in their morphology in terms of size, shape, and number of nuclei. We present an approach to compare cellular gene expression patterns between species, while accounting for varying embryo morphology, and apply it to our data and an equivalent dataset for Drosophila melanogaster. Our analysis reveals that all individual genes differ quantitatively in their spatio-temporal expression patterns between these species, primarily in terms of their relative position and dynamics. Despite many small quantitative differences, cellular gene expression profiles for the whole set of genes examined are largely similar. This suggests that cell types at this stage of development are conserved, though they can differ in their relative position by up to 3-4 cell widths and in their relative proportion between species by as much as 5-fold. Quantitative differences in the dynamics and relative level of a subset of genes between corresponding cell types may reflect altered regulatory functions between species. Our results emphasize that transcriptional networks can diverge over short evolutionary timescales and that even small changes can lead to distinct output in terms of the placement and number of equivalent cells.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila/embryology , Drosophila/genetics , Animals , Biological Evolution , Blastoderm/growth & development , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Regulatory Networks/genetics , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Species Specificity
3.
Cell ; 133(2): 364-74, 2008 Apr 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18423206

ABSTRACT

To fully understand animal transcription networks, it is essential to accurately measure the spatial and temporal expression patterns of transcription factors and their targets. We describe a registration technique that takes image-based data from hundreds of Drosophila blastoderm embryos, each costained for a reference gene and one of a set of genes of interest, and builds a model VirtualEmbryo. This model captures in a common framework the average expression patterns for many genes in spite of significant variation in morphology and expression between individual embryos. We establish the method's accuracy by showing that relationships between a pair of genes' expression inferred from the model are nearly identical to those measured in embryos costained for the pair. We present a VirtualEmbryo containing data for 95 genes at six time cohorts. We show that known gene-regulatory interactions can be automatically recovered from this data set and predict hundreds of new interactions.


Subject(s)
Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Gene Regulatory Networks , Models, Genetic , Animals , Blastoderm , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Genes, Insect
4.
Genome Biol ; 7(12): R123, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17184546

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To model and thoroughly understand animal transcription networks, it is essential to derive accurate spatial and temporal descriptions of developing gene expression patterns with cellular resolution. RESULTS: Here we describe a suite of methods that provide the first quantitative three-dimensional description of gene expression and morphology at cellular resolution in whole embryos. A database containing information derived from 1,282 embryos is released that describes the mRNA expression of 22 genes at multiple time points in the Drosophila blastoderm. We demonstrate that our methods are sufficiently accurate to detect previously undescribed features of morphology and gene expression. The cellular blastoderm is shown to have an intricate morphology of nuclear density patterns and apical/basal displacements that correlate with later well-known morphological features. Pair rule gene expression stripes, generally considered to specify patterning only along the anterior/posterior body axis, are shown to have complex changes in stripe location, stripe curvature, and expression level along the dorsal/ventral axis. Pair rule genes are also found to not always maintain the same register to each other. CONCLUSION: The application of these quantitative methods to other developmental systems will likely reveal many other previously unknown features and provide a more rigorous understanding of developmental regulatory networks.


Subject(s)
Blastoderm/cytology , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Gene Expression , Animals , Base Sequence , DNA Primers , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Fluorescent Dyes , RNA, Messenger/genetics
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