Genome-wide mapping of autonomous promoter activity in human cells

Authors
van Arensbergen J1, FitzPatrick VD2,3, de Haas M1, Pagie L1, Sluimer J1, Bussemaker HJ2,3, van Steensel B1.
03-08-2017
12:00pm
PST
Categories
RNA Synthetic Biology & Systems Biology
Speaker
Ryan Wagner
Abstract
Previous methods to systematically characterize sequence-intrinsic activity of promoters have been limited by relatively low throughput and the length of the sequences that could be tested. Here we present ‘survey of regulatory elements’ (SuRE), a method that assays more than 108 DNA fragments, each 0.2–2 kb in size, for their ability to drive transcription autonomously. In SuRE, a plasmid library of random genomic fragments upstream of a 20-bp barcode is constructed, and decoded by pairedend sequencing. This library is used to transfect cells, and barcodes in transcribed RNA are quantified by high-throughput sequencing. When applied to the human genome, we achieve 55-fold genome coverage, allowing us to map autonomous promoter activity genome-wide in K562 cells. By computational modeling we delineate subregions within promoters that are relevant for their activity. We show that antisense promoter transcription is generally dependent on the sense core promoter sequences, and that most enhancers and several families of repetitive elements act as autonomous transcription initiation sites.