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Status |
Public on Oct 23, 2013 |
Title |
Transcriptional super-enhancers connected to cell identity and disease |
Organisms |
Homo sapiens; Mus musculus |
Experiment type |
Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
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Summary |
Super-enhancers are large clusters of transcriptional enhancers that drive expression of genes that control and define cell identity. Improved understanding of the roles super-enhancers play in biology would be afforded by knowing the constellation of factors that constitute these domains and by identifying super-enhancers across the spectrum of human cell types. We describe here the population of transcription factors, cofactors, chromatin regulators and core transcription apparatus that occupy super-enhancers in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and evidence that super-enhancers are highly transcribed. We then use epigenomic data to produce a catalogue of super-enhancers in a broad range of human cell types. These super-enhancer domains are associated with genes encoding master transcription factors and other components that play important roles in the biology of these cells. Interestingly, sequence variation associated with a broad spectrum of diseases is especially enriched in the super-enhancers of disease-relevant cell types. Furthermore, we find that cancer cells generate super-enhancers at oncogenes and other genes that play important roles in tumor pathogenesis. We discuss these insights and their implications for future study of human health and disease.
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Overall design |
ChIP-Seq for transcription factors in mouse embryonic stem cells and H3K27ac in Jurkat T-ALL cell line RNA-Seq for mouse embryonic stem cells
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Contributor(s) |
Abraham BJ, Hnisz D, Lau A, Sigova A, Saint-Andre V, Hoke H, Rahl P, Newman JJ, Lawton LN, Whyte W, Young RA |
Citation(s) |
24119843 |
Submission date |
Oct 22, 2013 |
Last update date |
May 15, 2019 |
Contact name |
Richard A Young |
E-mail(s) |
young_computation@wi.mit.edu
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Phone |
617-258-5219
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Organization name |
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
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Lab |
Young Lab
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Street address |
9 Cambridge Center
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City |
Cambridge |
State/province |
MA |
ZIP/Postal code |
02142 |
Country |
USA |
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Platforms (2) |
GPL9115 |
Illumina Genome Analyzer II (Homo sapiens) |
GPL9250 |
Illumina Genome Analyzer II (Mus musculus) |
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Samples (5)
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Relations |
BioProject |
PRJNA223352 |
SRA |
SRP031779 |