| Literature DB >> 21035756 |
Michael L Stitzel1, Praveen Sethupathy, Daniel S Pearson, Peter S Chines, Lingyun Song, Michael R Erdos, Ryan Welch, Stephen C J Parker, Alan P Boyle, Laura J Scott, Elliott H Margulies, Michael Boehnke, Terrence S Furey, Gregory E Crawford, Francis S Collins.
Abstract
Identifying cis-regulatory elements is important to understanding how human pancreatic islets modulate gene expression in physiologic or pathophysiologic (e.g., diabetic) conditions. We conducted genome-wide analysis of DNase I hypersensitive sites, histone H3 lysine methylation modifications (K4me1, K4me3, K79me2), and CCCTC factor (CTCF) binding in human islets. This identified ∼18,000 putative promoters (several hundred unannotated and islet-active). Surprisingly, active promoter modifications were absent at genes encoding islet-specific hormones, suggesting a distinct regulatory mechanism. Of 34,039 distal (nonpromoter) regulatory elements, 47% are islet unique and 22% are CTCF bound. In the 18 type 2 diabetes (T2D)-associated loci, we identified 118 putative regulatory elements and confirmed enhancer activity for 12 of 33 tested. Among six regulatory elements harboring T2D-associated variants, two exhibit significant allele-specific differences in activity. These findings present a global snapshot of the human islet epigenome and should provide functional context for noncoding variants emerging from genetic studies of T2D and other islet disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21035756 PMCID: PMC3026436 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2010.09.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287