Modular combinatorial binding among human trans-acting factors reveals direct and indirect factor binding.

BMC Genomics

MIT, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA.

Published: January 2017

Background: The combinatorial binding of trans-acting factors (TFs) to the DNA is critical to the spatial and temporal specificity of gene regulation. For certain regulatory regions, more than one regulatory module (set of TFs that bind together) are combined to achieve context-specific gene regulation. However, previous approaches are limited to either pairwise TF co-association analysis or assuming that only one module is used in each regulatory region.

Results: We present a new computational approach that models the modular organization of TF combinatorial binding. Our method learns compact and coherent regulatory modules from in vivo binding data using a topic model. We found that the binding of 115 TFs in K562 cells can be organized into 49 interpretable modules. Furthermore, we found that tens of thousands of regulatory regions use multiple modules, a structure that cannot be observed with previous hard clustering based methods. The modules discovered recapitulate many published protein-protein physical interactions, have consistent functional annotations of chromatin states, and uncover context specific co-binding such as gene proximal binding of NFY + FOS + SP and distal binding of NFY + FOS + USF. For certain TFs, the co-binding partners of direct binding (motif present) differs from those of indirect binding (motif absent); the distinct set of co-binding partners can predict whether the TF binds directly or indirectly with up to 95% accuracy. Joint analysis across two cell types reveals both cell-type-specific and shared regulatory modules.

Conclusions: Our results provide comprehensive cell-type-specific combinatorial binding maps and suggest a modular organization of combinatorial binding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5219757PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-3434-3DOI Listing

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