| Literature DB >> 28261261 |
Loris Mularoni1, Mireia Ramos-Rodríguez2, Lorenzo Pasquali3.
Abstract
The pancreatic islet is a highly specialized tissue embedded in the exocrine pancreas whose primary function is that of controlling glucose homeostasis. Thus, understanding the transcriptional control of islet-cell may help to puzzle out the pathogenesis of glucose metabolism disorders. Integrative computational analyses of transcriptomic and epigenomic data allows predicting genomic coordinates of putative regulatory elements across the genome and, decipher tissue-specific functions of the non-coding genome. We herein present the Islet Regulome Browser, a tool that allows fast access and exploration of pancreatic islet epigenomic and transcriptomic data produced by different labs worldwide. The Islet Regulome Browser is now accessible on the internet or may be installed locally. It allows uploading custom tracks as well as providing interactive access to a wealth of information including Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) variants, different classes of regulatory elements, together with enhancer clusters, stretch-enhancers and transcription factor binding sites in pancreatic progenitors and adult human pancreatic islets. Integration and visualization of such data may allow a deeper understanding of the regulatory networks driving tissue-specific transcription and guide the identification of regulatory variants. We believe that such tool will facilitate the access to pancreatic islet public genomic datasets providing a major boost to functional genomics studies in glucose metabolism related traits including diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: epigenome; gene regulation; non-coding DNA; pancreatic islet; β-cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 28261261 PMCID: PMC5306130 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2017.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Figure 1Structure of the Islet Regulome Browser. Schematic representation of the interactions between the 3 main components of the Islet Regulome Browser web application.
Figure 2Front panel of the Islet Regulome Browser. From the initial page the user can generate a plot by selecting the desired parameters and a valid gene name or an absolute chromosomal location.
Figure 3Plots generated by the Islet Regulome Browser. (A) Illustration of the different sections of the plot, see the text for the detailed description. The left panel shows an illustrative example of a fasting glycemia associated locus (proximal to the PCSK1 gene), depicting highly associated SNPs mapping to active regulatory elements (dashed box). The right panel plot illustrates the adult islet regulatory landscape at the locus transcribing the β-cell specific transcription factor NKX6.1. The locus is characterized by a large Enhancer Cluster upstream the gene annotation. (B) Example of a fasting glycemia associated locus in proximity of the DGKB gene. As for the previous example, the integration of GWAS data with regulatory elements and transcription factors binding sites, allows pinpointing associated variants that directly map to active enhancer sites (dashed box). (C) Islet Regulome Browser view of the pancreatic progenitors regulatory landscape at chromosome 17q12. The locus is characterized by a high density of active enhancer elements bound by multiple transcription factors in proximity of the gene encoding HNF1B, a transcription factors involved in pancreatic development and homeostasis.
Figure 4Tables generated by the Islet Regulome Browser. Example of tables generated by the Islet Regulome Browser related to the PROX1 gene locus (A). The tables include information on the coordinates of the regulatory elements and transcription factor bindings (B), the GWAS variants along with their p-value of association (C) and the reference ID and expression level of the different transcript isoforms overlapping the selected locus (D).