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Series GSE184236 Query DataSets for GSE184236
Status Public on Mar 08, 2022
Title Differential cofactor dependencies define functionally distinct types of human enhancers (STAP-seq)
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Other
Summary Development and homeostasis of all multicellular organisms rely on differential cell-type-specific gene expression that is regulated by non-coding genomic enhancer elements. Enhancers function through the transcription-factor-mediated recruitment of cofactors, a structurally and functionally diverse set of proteins that activate RNA polymerase II transcription at promoters. Despite the important roles of enhancers and cofactors in transcriptional regulation, it is still not clear if all cofactors are required for all enhancers or if different enhancers have distinct cofactor dependencies and whether differential cofactor dependencies could be used to functionally categorize enhancers. Here, we quantified enhancer activities along the entire human genome using the massively parallel enhancer-activity assay STARR-seq in HCT116 cells, following the rapid auxin-inducible degradation of eight different cofactors. We identified groups of enhancers with distinct cofactor requirements, including enhancers whose activity is insensitive to the depletion of the core Mediator subunit MED14 or the bromodomain protein BRD4, respectively. In particular, Mediator seemed dispensable for P53-responsive enhancers and MED14-depleted cells in which transcription globally failed were still able to induce endogenous P53 target genes such as p21. Similarly, BRD4 was not required for genes with a CCAAT- and TATA-box proximal enhancer, including histone genes and LTR12 family retrotransposons, and for the induction of TATA-box containing heat-shock genes. Taken together, we show that different types of enhancers with distinct cofactor dependencies exist, including enhancer types that function in the absence of well-known cofactors and are employed to regulate specific gene classes and transcriptional programs. This represents the first functional categorization of enhancers by their cofactor dependencies that improves our understanding of alternative ways to activate transcription, which can aid in developing more precise interventions to modulate gene expression.
 
Overall design STAP-seq upon depletion of BRD4 in HCT116 cells with a library of candidate sequences consisting of wild-type BRD4-independent promoters, mutants for TATA- or/and CCAAT-box motifs and neutral genomic sequences with insertions of these motifs. All experiments were performed in 2 biological replicates.
 
Contributor(s) Neumayr C, Haberle V, Arnold C, Bergauer K, Rath M, Pagani M, Stark A
Citation(s) 35650434
Submission date Sep 15, 2021
Last update date Jun 10, 2022
Contact name Vanja Haberle
E-mail(s) vanja.haberle@imp.ac.at
Organization name The Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP)
Lab Stark Lab
Street address Campus-Vienna-Biocenter 1
City Vienna
ZIP/Postal code 1030
Country Austria
 
Platforms (1)
GPL21697 NextSeq 550 (Homo sapiens)
Samples (5)
GSM5582238 STAPseq_BRD4_msAuxin_rep1
GSM5582239 STAPseq_BRD4_msAuxin_rep2
GSM5582240 STAPseq_BRD4_psAuxin_rep1
This SubSeries is part of SuperSeries:
GSE156741 Differential cofactor dependencies define functionally distinct types of human enhancers
Relations
BioProject PRJNA763628
SRA SRP337281

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Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE184236_RAW.tar 610.0 Kb (http)(custom) TAR (of TXT)
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Raw data are available in SRA
Processed data provided as supplementary file

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