Deciphering eukaryotic gene-regulatory logic with 100 million random promoters.

Nat Biotechnol
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

How transcription factors (TFs) interpret cis-regulatory DNA sequence to control gene expression remains unclear, largely because past studies using native and engineered sequences had insufficient scale. Here, we measure the expression output of >100 million synthetic yeast promoter sequences that are fully random. These sequences yield diverse, reproducible expression levels that can be explained by their chance inclusion of functional TF binding sites. We use machine learning to build interpretable models of transcriptional regulation that predict ~94% of the expression driven from independent test promoters and ~89% of the expression driven from native yeast promoter fragments. These models allow us to characterize each TF's specificity, activity and interactions with chromatin. TF activity depends on binding-site strand, position, DNA helical face and chromatin context. Notably, expression level is influenced by weak regulatory interactions, which confound designed-sequence studies. Our analyses show that massive-throughput assays of fully random DNA can provide the big data necessary to develop complex, predictive models of gene regulation.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Nat Biotechnol
Volume
38
Issue
1
Pages
56-65
Date Published
2020 01
ISSN
1546-1696
DOI
10.1038/s41587-019-0315-8
PubMed ID
31792407
PubMed Central ID
PMC6954276
Links
Grant list
K99 HG009920 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
RM1 HG006193 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States