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    Mice and men: Their promoter properties

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    Article (681.3Kb)
    Date
    2006
    Author
    Bajic, Vladimir B.
    Tan, Sin lam
    Christoffels, Alan
    Schonbach, Christian
    Lipovich, Leonard
    Yang, Liang
    Hofmann, Oliver
    Kruger, Adele
    Hide, Winston
    Kai, Chikatoshi
    Kawai, Jun
    Hume, David, A.
    Carninci, Piero
    Hayashizaki, Yoshihide
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    Abstract
    Using the two largest collections of Mus musculus and Homo sapiens transcription start sites (TSSs) determined based on CAGE tags, ditags, full-length cDNAs, and other transcript data, we describe the compositional landscape surrounding TSSs with the aim of gaining better insight into the properties of mammalian promoters. We classified TSSs into four types based on compositional properties of regions immediately surrounding them. These properties highlighted distinctive features in the extended core promoters that helped us delineate boundaries of the transcription initiation domain space for both species. The TSS types were analyzed for associations with initiating dinucleotides, CpG islands, TATA boxes, and an extensive collection of statistically significant cis-elements in mouse and human. We found that different TSS types show preferences for different sets of initiating dinucleotides and ciselements. Through Gene Ontology and eVOC categories and tissue expression libraries we linked TSS characteristics to expression. Moreover, we show a link of TSS characteristics to very specific genomic organization in an example of immune-response-related genes (GO:0006955). Our results shed light on the global properties of the two transcriptomes not revealed before and therefore provide the framework for better understanding of the transcriptional mechanisms in the two species, as well as a framework for development of new and more efficient promoter- and gene-finding tools.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10566/1588
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    • Prof. Alan Christoffels
    • Research Articles (SANBI)

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