학술논문

Epigenetic patterns in a complete human genome
Document Type
article
Source
Science. 376(6588)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Human Genome
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Generic health relevance
Centromere
CpG Islands
DNA Methylation
Disease
Epigenesis
Genetic
Genetic Loci
Genome
Human
Genomics
Humans
Reference Standards
Sequence Analysis
DNA
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
The completion of a telomere-to-telomere human reference genome, T2T-CHM13, has resolved complex regions of the genome, including repetitive and homologous regions. Here, we present a high-resolution epigenetic study of previously unresolved sequences, representing entire acrocentric chromosome short arms, gene family expansions, and a diverse collection of repeat classes. This resource precisely maps CpG methylation (32.28 million CpGs), DNA accessibility, and short-read datasets (166,058 previously unresolved chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing peaks) to provide evidence of activity across previously unidentified or corrected genes and reveals clinically relevant paralog-specific regulation. Probing CpG methylation across human centromeres from six diverse individuals generated an estimate of variability in kinetochore localization. This analysis provides a framework with which to investigate the most elusive regions of the human genome, granting insights into epigenetic regulation.