학술논문

Comparative analysis of the transcriptome across distant species.
Document Type
article
Author
Gerstein, Mark BRozowsky, JoelYan, Koon-KiuWang, DaifengCheng, ChaoBrown, James BDavis, Carrie AHillier, LaDeanaSisu, CristinaLi, Jingyi JessicaPei, BaikangHarmanci, Arif ODuff, Michael ODjebali, SarahAlexander, Roger PAlver, Burak HAuerbach, RaymondBell, KimberlyBickel, Peter JBoeck, Max EBoley, Nathan PBooth, Benjamin WCherbas, LucyCherbas, PeterDi, ChaoDobin, AlexDrenkow, JorgEwing, BrentFang, GangFastuca, MeganFeingold, Elise AFrankish, AdamGao, GuanjunGood, Peter JGuigó, RodericHammonds, AnnHarrow, JenHoskins, Roger AHowald, CédricHu, LongHuang, HaiyanHubbard, Tim JPHuynh, ChauJha, SonaliKasper, DionnaKato, MasaomiKaufman, Thomas CKitchen, Robert RLadewig, ErikLagarde, JulienLai, EricLeng, JingLu, ZhiMacCoss, MichaelMay, GemmaMcWhirter, RebeccaMerrihew, GenniferMiller, David MMortazavi, AliMurad, RabiOliver, BrianOlson, SaraPark, Peter JPazin, Michael JPerrimon, NorbertPervouchine, DmitriReinke, ValerieReymond, AlexandreRobinson, GarrettSamsonova, AnastasiaSaunders, Gary ISchlesinger, FelixSethi, AnuragSlack, Frank JSpencer, William CStoiber, Marcus HStrasbourger, PninaTanzer, AndreaThompson, Owen AWan, Kenneth HWang, GuilinWang, HuaienWatkins, Kathie LWen, JiayuWen, KejiaXue, ChenghaiYang, LiYip, KevinZaleski, ChrisZhang, YanZheng, HenryBrenner, Steven EGraveley, Brenton RCelniker, Susan EGingeras, Thomas RWaterston, Robert
Source
Nature. 512(7515)
Subject
Chromatin
Animals
Humans
Drosophila melanogaster
Caenorhabditis elegans
Histones
RNA
Untranslated
Cluster Analysis
Gene Expression Profiling
Sequence Analysis
RNA
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Larva
Pupa
Models
Genetic
Promoter Regions
Genetic
Molecular Sequence Annotation
Transcriptome
Genetics
Human Genome
Generic health relevance
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
The transcriptome is the readout of the genome. Identifying common features in it across distant species can reveal fundamental principles. To this end, the ENCODE and modENCODE consortia have generated large amounts of matched RNA-sequencing data for human, worm and fly. Uniform processing and comprehensive annotation of these data allow comparison across metazoan phyla, extending beyond earlier within-phylum transcriptome comparisons and revealing ancient, conserved features. Specifically, we discover co-expression modules shared across animals, many of which are enriched in developmental genes. Moreover, we use expression patterns to align the stages in worm and fly development and find a novel pairing between worm embryo and fly pupae, in addition to the embryo-to-embryo and larvae-to-larvae pairings. Furthermore, we find that the extent of non-canonical, non-coding transcription is similar in each organism, per base pair. Finally, we find in all three organisms that the gene-expression levels, both coding and non-coding, can be quantitatively predicted from chromatin features at the promoter using a 'universal model' based on a single set of organism-independent parameters.