Sharma Yogita, Chilamakuri Chandra Sekhar Reddy, Bakke Marit, Lenhard Boris
Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 13;9(2):e88880. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0088880. eCollection 2014.
Nuclear receptors are a large structural class of transcription factors that act with their co-regulators and repressors to maintain a variety of biological and physiological processes such as metabolism, development and reproduction. They are activated through the binding of small ligands, which can be replaced by drug molecules, making nuclear receptors promising drug targets. Transcriptional regulation of the genes that encode them is central to gaining a deeper understanding of the diversity of their biochemical and biophysical roles and their role in disease and therapy. Even though they share evolutionary history, nuclear receptor genes have fundamentally different expression patterns, ranging from ubiquitously expressed to tissue-specific and spatiotemporally complex. However, current understanding of regulation in nuclear receptor gene family is still nascent.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, we investigate the relationship between long-range regulation of nuclear receptor family and their known functionality. Towards this goal, we identify the nuclear receptor genes that are potential targets based on counts of highly conserved non-coding elements. We validate our results using publicly available expression (RNA-seq) and histone modification (ChIP-seq) data from the ENCODE project. We find that nuclear receptor genes involved in developmental roles show strong evidence of long-range mechanism of transcription regulation with distinct cis-regulatory content they feature clusters of highly conserved non-coding elements distributed in regions spanning several Megabases, long and multiple CpG islands, bivalent promoter marks and statistically significant higher enrichment of enhancer mark around their gene loci. On the other hand nuclear receptor genes that are involved in tissue-specific roles lack these features, having simple transcriptional controls and a greater variety of mechanisms for producing paralogs. We further examine the combinatorial patterns of histone maps associated with dynamic functional elements in order to explore the regulatory landscape of the gene family. The results show that our proposed classification capturing long-range regulation is strongly indicative of the functional roles of the nuclear receptors compared to existing classifications.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We present a new classification for nuclear receptor gene family capturing whether a nuclear receptor is a possible target of long-range regulation or not. We compare our classification to existing structural (mechanism of action) and homology-based classifications. Our results show that understanding long-range regulation of nuclear receptors can provide key insight into their functional roles as well as evolutionary history; and this strongly merits further study.
核受体是一大类转录因子,它们与共调节因子和阻遏因子共同作用,以维持多种生物学和生理过程,如新陈代谢、发育和繁殖。它们通过小分子配体的结合而被激活,这些小分子配体可被药物分子取代,这使得核受体成为有前景的药物靶点。对编码它们的基因进行转录调控,对于更深入了解其生化和生物物理作用的多样性以及它们在疾病和治疗中的作用至关重要。尽管核受体基因具有共同的进化历史,但它们具有根本不同的表达模式,从普遍表达到组织特异性以及时空复杂表达。然而,目前对核受体基因家族调控的理解仍处于起步阶段。
方法/主要发现:在本研究中,我们研究核受体家族的远程调控与其已知功能之间的关系。为实现这一目标,我们基于高度保守的非编码元件数量,确定潜在的核受体基因靶点。我们使用来自ENCODE项目的公开可用表达(RNA测序)和组蛋白修饰(染色质免疫沉淀测序)数据验证我们的结果。我们发现,参与发育作用的核受体基因显示出转录调控远程机制的有力证据,其具有独特的顺式调控内容,其特征是高度保守的非编码元件簇分布在跨越几个兆碱基的区域、长且多个CpG岛、二价启动子标记以及其基因座周围增强子标记的统计学显著更高富集。另一方面,参与组织特异性作用的核受体基因缺乏这些特征,具有简单的转录控制以及产生旁系同源物的更多样化机制。我们进一步研究与动态功能元件相关的组蛋白图谱的组合模式,以探索该基因家族的调控格局。结果表明,与现有分类相比,我们提出的捕捉远程调控的分类强烈指示了核受体的功能作用。
结论/意义:我们提出了一种核受体基因家族的新分类,以确定核受体是否是远程调控的可能靶点。我们将我们的分类与现有的结构(作用机制)和基于同源性的分类进行比较。我们的结果表明,了解核受体的远程调控可以为其功能作用以及进化历史提供关键见解;这非常值得进一步研究。