Leveraging chromatin accessibility for transcriptional regulatory network inference in T Helper 17 Cells

  1. Richard Bonneau2,7
  1. 1 Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
  2. 2 New York University;
  3. 3 Flatiron Institute;
  4. 4 Duke University;
  5. 5 Novartis;
  6. 6 New York University Medical School
  • * Corresponding author; email: rb133{at}nyu.edu
  • Abstract

    Transcriptional regulatory networks (TRNs) provide insight into cellular behavior by describing interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and their gene targets. The Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin (ATAC)-seq, coupled with transcription-factor motif analysis, provides indirect evidence of chromatin binding for hundreds of TFs genome-wide. Here, we propose methods for TRN inference in a mammalian setting, using ATAC-seq data to influence gene expression modeling. We rigorously test our methods in the context of T Helper Cell Type 17 (Th17) differentiation, generating new ATAC-seq data to complement existing Th17 genomic resources (gene expression data, TF knock-outs and ChIP-seq experiments). In this resource-rich mammalian setting, our extensive benchmarking provides quantitative, genome-scale evaluation of TRN inference combining ATAC-seq and RNA-seq data. We refine and extend our previous Th17 TRN, using our new TRN inference methods to integrate all Th17 data (gene expression, ATAC-seq, TF KO, ChIP-seq). We highlight newly discovered roles for individual TFs and groups of TFs ("TF-TF modules") in Th17 gene regulation. Given the popularity of ATAC-seq, which provides high-resolution with low sample input requirements, we anticipate that application of our methods will improve TRN inference in new mammalian systems, especially in vivo, for cells directly from humans and animal models.

    • Received April 8, 2018.
    • Accepted January 15, 2019.

    This manuscript is Open Access.

    This article, published in Genome Research, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International license), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

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