4.8 Article

A Functional and Evolutionary Perspective on Transcription Factor Binding in Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

PLANT CELL
Volume 26, Issue 10, Pages 3894-3910

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1105/tpc.114.130591

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Multidisciplinary Research Partnership Bioinformatics: from nucleotides to networks Project of Ghent University [01MR0310W]
  2. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (IWT) in Flanders
  3. FWO travel grant
  4. Max Planck Society

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Understanding the mechanisms underlying gene regulation is paramount to comprehend the translation from genotype to phenotype. The two are connected by gene expression, and it is generally thought that variation in transcription factor (TF) function is an important determinant of phenotypic evolution. We analyzed publicly available genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments for 27 TFs in Arabidopsis thaliana and constructed an experimental network containing 46,619 regulatory interactions and 15,188 target genes. We identified hub targets and highly occupied target (HOT) regions, which are enriched for genes involved in development, stimulus responses, signaling, and gene regulatory processes in the currently profiled network. We provide several lines of evidence that TF binding at plant HOT regions is functional, in contrast to that in animals, and not merely the result of accessible chromatin. HOT regions harbor specific DNA motifs, are enriched for differentially expressed genes, and are often conserved across crucifers and dicots, even though they are not under higher levels of purifying selection than non-HOT regions. Distal bound regions are under purifying selection as well and are enriched for a chromatin state showing regulation by the Polycomb repressive complex. Gene expression complexity is positively correlated with the total number of bound TFs, revealing insights in the regulatory code for genes with different expression breadths. The integration of noncanonical and canonical DNA motif information yields new hypotheses on cobinding and tethering between specific TFs involved in flowering and light regulation.

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