| Literature DB >> 17558387 |
Gordon Robertson1, Martin Hirst, Matthew Bainbridge, Misha Bilenky, Yongjun Zhao, Thomas Zeng, Ghia Euskirchen, Bridget Bernier, Richard Varhol, Allen Delaney, Nina Thiessen, Obi L Griffith, Ann He, Marco Marra, Michael Snyder, Steven Jones.
Abstract
We developed a method, ChIP-sequencing (ChIP-seq), combining chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and massively parallel sequencing to identify mammalian DNA sequences bound by transcription factors in vivo. We used ChIP-seq to map STAT1 targets in interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-stimulated and unstimulated human HeLa S3 cells, and compared the method's performance to ChIP-PCR and to ChIP-chip for four chromosomes. By ChIP-seq, using 15.1 and 12.9 million uniquely mapped sequence reads, and an estimated false discovery rate of less than 0.001, we identified 41,582 and 11,004 putative STAT1-binding regions in stimulated and unstimulated cells, respectively. Of the 34 loci known to contain STAT1 interferon-responsive binding sites, ChIP-seq found 24 (71%). ChIP-seq targets were enriched in sequences similar to known STAT1 binding motifs. Comparisons with two ChIP-PCR data sets suggested that ChIP-seq sensitivity was between 70% and 92% and specificity was at least 95%.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17558387 DOI: 10.1038/nmeth1068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Methods ISSN: 1548-7091 Impact factor: 28.547