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In JoVE (1)
Other Publications (1)
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Articles by Su Qin Peh in JoVE
הכרומטין ניתוח אינטראקציה עם מנבא סוף תג הרצף (Chia-PET) עבור מיפוי אינטראקציות הכרומטין הבנת תקנה תמלול
Yufen Goh*1, Melissa J. Fullwood*1,2,3, Huay Mei Poh1, Su Qin Peh1, Chin Thing Ong1, Jingyao Zhang1, Xiaoan Ruan1, Yijun Ruan1,3
1Genome Institute of Singapore, Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore, 2A*STAR-Duke-NUS Neuroscience Research Partnership, Singapore, 3Department of Biochemistry, National University of Singapore, Singapore
ניתוח הכרומטין אינטראקציה ידי מנבא סוף תג הרצף (Chia-PET) היא שיטה
Other articles by Su Qin Peh on PubMed
Extensive Promoter-centered Chromatin Interactions Provide a Topological Basis for Transcription Regulation
Cell. Jan, 2012 | Pubmed ID: 22265404
Higher-order chromosomal organization for transcription regulation is poorly understood in eukaryotes. Using genome-wide Chromatin Interaction Analysis with Paired-End-Tag sequencing (ChIA-PET), we mapped long-range chromatin interactions associated with RNA polymerase II in human cells and uncovered widespread promoter-centered intragenic, extragenic, and intergenic interactions. These interactions further aggregated into higher-order clusters, wherein proximal and distal genes were engaged through promoter-promoter interactions. Most genes with promoter-promoter interactions were active and transcribed cooperatively, and some interacting promoters could influence each other implying combinatorial complexity of transcriptional controls. Comparative analyses of different cell lines showed that cell-specific chromatin interactions could provide structural frameworks for cell-specific transcription, and suggested significant enrichment of enhancer-promoter interactions for cell-specific functions. Furthermore, genetically-identified disease-associated noncoding elements were found to be spatially engaged with corresponding genes through long-range interactions. Overall, our study provides insights into transcription regulation by three-dimensional chromatin interactions for both housekeeping and cell-specific genes in human cells.
