Unknown,Transcriptomics,Genomics,Proteomics

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Histone Modifications by ChIP-seq from ENCODE/University of Washington


ABSTRACT: This data was generated by ENCODE. If you have questions about the data, contact the submitting laboratory directly (Richard Sandstrom mailto:sull@u.washington.edu). If you have questions about the Genome Browser track associated with this data, contact ENCODE (mailto:genome@soe.ucsc.edu). This track was produced as part of the ENCODE Project. This track displays genome-wide maps of histone modifications in different cell lines (http://hgwdev.cse.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgEncodeVocab?type=cellType) using ChIP-seq high-throughput sequencing. For data usage terms and conditions, please refer to http://www.genome.gov/27528022 and http://www.genome.gov/Pages/Research/ENCODE/ENCODEDataReleasePolicyFinal2008.pdf Cells were grown according to the approved ENCODE cell culture protocols (http://hgwdev.cse.ucsc.edu/ENCODE/protocols/cell). Cells were cross-linked with 1% formaldehyde, and the reaction was quenched by the addition of glycine. Fixed cells were rinsed with PBS, lysed in nuclei lysis buffer, and the chromatin was sheared to 200-500 bp fragments using a Fisher Dismembrator (model 500). Sheared chromatin fragments were immunoprecipitated with specific polyclonal antibodies at 4 °C with gentle rotation. Antibody-chromatin complexes were washed and eluted. The cross-linking in the immunoprecipitated DNA was reversed and treated with RNase-A. Following proteinase K treatment, the DNA fragments were purified by phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol extraction and ethanol precipitation. A quantity of 20-50 ng of ChIP DNA was end-repaired, followed by the addition of adenine, ligation to Illumina adapters, and creation of a Solexa library for sequencing. ChIP-seq affinity was directly measured through the raw tag density (Raw Signal), which is shown in the track as density of tags mapping within a 150 bp sliding window (at a 20 bp step across the genome). ChIP-seq affinity zones (HotSpots) were identified using the HotSpot algorithm described in Sabo et al. (2004). One percent false discovery rate thresholds (FDR 1.0%) were computed for each cell type by applying the HotSpot algorithm to an equivalent number of random uniquely mapping 36-mers. ChIP-Seq affinities (Peaks) were identified as signal peaks within FDR 1.0% hypersensitive zones using a peak-finding algorithm. All tracks have a False Discovery Rate of 1% (FDR 1.0%). Data were verified by sequencing biological replicates displaying a correlation coefficient > 0.9.

ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens

SUBMITTER: ENCODE DCC 

PROVIDER: E-GEOD-35583 | biostudies-arrayexpress |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress

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Publications

The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome.

Thurman Robert E RE   Rynes Eric E   Humbert Richard R   Vierstra Jeff J   Maurano Matthew T MT   Haugen Eric E   Sheffield Nathan C NC   Stergachis Andrew B AB   Wang Hao H   Vernot Benjamin B   Garg Kavita K   John Sam S   Sandstrom Richard R   Bates Daniel D   Boatman Lisa L   Canfield Theresa K TK   Diegel Morgan M   Dunn Douglas D   Ebersol Abigail K AK   Frum Tristan T   Giste Erika E   Johnson Audra K AK   Johnson Ericka M EM   Kutyavin Tanya T   Lajoie Bryan B   Lee Bum-Kyu BK   Lee Kristen K   London Darin D   Lotakis Dimitra D   Neph Shane S   Neri Fidencio F   Nguyen Eric D ED   Qu Hongzhu H   Reynolds Alex P AP   Roach Vaughn V   Safi Alexias A   Sanchez Minerva E ME   Sanyal Amartya A   Shafer Anthony A   Simon Jeremy M JM   Song Lingyun L   Vong Shinny S   Weaver Molly M   Yan Yongqi Y   Zhang Zhancheng Z   Zhang Zhuzhu Z   Lenhard Boris B   Tewari Muneesh M   Dorschner Michael O MO   Hansen R Scott RS   Navas Patrick A PA   Stamatoyannopoulos George G   Iyer Vishwanath R VR   Lieb Jason D JD   Sunyaev Shamil R SR   Akey Joshua M JM   Sabo Peter J PJ   Kaul Rajinder R   Furey Terrence S TS   Dekker Job J   Crawford Gregory E GE   Stamatoyannopoulos John A JA  

Nature 20120901 7414


DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) are markers of regulatory DNA and have underpinned the discovery of all classes of cis-regulatory elements including enhancers, promoters, insulators, silencers and locus control regions. Here we present the first extensive map of human DHSs identified through genome-wide profiling in 125 diverse cell and tissue types. We identify ∼2.9 million DHSs that encompass virtually all known experimentally validated cis-regulatory sequences and expose a vast trove of n  ...[more]

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