| Literature DB >> 26868054 |
Xiaowei Xie1, Wenbin Ma2, Zhou Songyang2, Zhenhua Luo3, Junfeng Huang2, Zhiming Dai4, Yuanyan Xiong5.
Abstract
Distal regulatory elements have been shown to regulate gene transcription through spatial interactions, and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are linked with distal gene expression by spatial proximity, which helps to explain the causal role of disease-associated SNPs in non-coding region. Therefore, studies on spatial interactions between chromatin have created a new avenue for elucidating the mechanism of transcriptional regulation in disease pathogenesis. Recently, a growing number of chromatin interactions have been revealed by means of 3C, 4C, 5C, ChIA-PET and Hi-C technologies. To interpret and utilize these interactions, we constructed chromatin-chromatin spatial interaction (CCSI) database by integrating and annotating 91 sets of chromatin interaction data derived from published literature, UCSC database and NCBI GEO database, resulting in a total of 3,017,962 pairwise interactions (false discovery rate < 0.05), covering human, mouse and yeast. A web interface has been designed to provide access to the chromatin interactions. The main features of CCSI are (i) showing chromatin interactions and corresponding genes, enhancers and SNPs within the regions in the search page; (ii) offering complete interaction datasets, enhancer and SNP information in the download page; and (iii) providing analysis pipeline for the annotation of interaction data. In conclusion, CCSI will facilitate exploring transcriptional regulatory mechanism in disease pathogenesis associated with spatial interactions among genes, regulatory regions and SNPs. Database URL: http://songyanglab.sysu.edu.cn/ccsi.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26868054 PMCID: PMC4750547 DOI: 10.1093/database/bav124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1Framework of constructing CCSI database.
Figure 2Chromosomal 3D structure and promoter–promoter interactions of Chr1 in IMR90 cell line based on a set of Hi-C data. (A) Chromosomal 3D structure. The dashed circle with two orange crescents that stand for nuclear pore complex is the nucleus membrane. The thick grey lines are chromatin and the purple circles stand for proteins that link chromatin together. (B) Promoter–promoter interactions of Chr1. (C) Promoter–promoter interactions of Chr1:1-20000000, zooming into the interactions. The red lines stand for long-range interactions (distance between interaction pair > 500 kb), while the blue lines for short-range (distance < 50 kb) and the green lines for middle-range (distance spanning 50–500 kb). The black texts are the gene names of corresponding loci.
Figure 3Principles of 3C, 4C, 5C, ChIA-PET and Hi-C. (A) Principles of 3C, 4C and 5C. The thick dark blue and grey lines stand for two different chromatin fragments and the purple dot in the middle is the protein that binds them together. Both black and orange dashed lines represent the restriction sites and the red star is the ligation site of two fragments. The arrows parallel with chromatin fragments represent primers. The green line in 5C is the oligo sequence. (B) Principles of ChIA-PET and Hi-C. The notations appearing in (A) have the same meaning. In ChIA-PET pipeline the tawny ‘Y’ shape represents the antibody specifically binding to the protein (purple dot). The black and dark red dots stand for linkerA and linkerB, respectively. Finally, in Hi-C pipeline the red tadpole is biotin mark, which will be pulled down by streptavidin bead (orange scissor).
Figure 4Search result for human after inputting IRX3. Chr16:53906612-53949261 which contains enhancers and overlaps with the intron of FTO spatially interacts with chr16:54281612-54289286 which contains the promoter of IRX3.