TY - GEN T1 - Genome-wide identification of Drosophila dorso-ventral enhancers by differential histone acetylation analysis AU - Koenecke, Nina AU - Johnston, Jeff AU - Bjoern Gaertner AU - Natarajan, Malini AU - Zeitlinger, Julia DO - 10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.C.3614429 UR - https://figshare.com/collections/Genome-wide_identification_of_Drosophila_dorso-ventral_enhancers_by_differential_histone_acetylation_analysis/3614429 AB - Abstract Background Drosophila dorso-ventral (DV) patterning is one of the best-understood regulatory networks to date, and illustrates the fundamental role of enhancers in controlling patterning, cell fate specification, and morphogenesis during development. Histone acetylation such as H3K27ac is an excellent marker for active enhancers, but it is challenging to obtain precise locations for enhancers as the highest levels of this modification flank the enhancer regions. How to best identify tissue-specific enhancers in a developmental system de novo with a minimal set of data is still unclear. Results Using DV patterning as a test system, we develop a simple and effective method to identify tissue-specific enhancers de novo. We sample a broad set of candidate enhancer regions using data on CREB-binding protein co-factor binding or ATAC-seq chromatin accessibility, and then identify those regions with significant differences in histone acetylation between tissues. This method identifies hundreds of novel DV enhancers and outperforms ChIP-seq data of relevant transcription factors when benchmarked with mRNA expression data and transgenic reporter assays. These DV enhancers allow the de novo discovery of the relevant transcription factor motifs involved in DV patterning and contain additional motifs that are evolutionarily conserved and for which the corresponding transcription factors are expressed in a DV-biased fashion. Finally, we identify novel target genes of the regulatory network, implicating morphogenesis genes as early targets of DV patterning. Conclusions Taken together, our approach has expanded our knowledge of the DV patterning network even further and is a general method to identify enhancers in any developmental system, including mammalian development. KW - Genetics KW - FOS: Biological sciences KW - Biotechnology KW - 69999 Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified KW - 80699 Information Systems not elsewhere classified KW - FOS: Computer and information sciences KW - Developmental Biology KW - Plant Biology KW - Computational Biology PY - 2016 PB - Figshare ER -