Abstract
The majority of the human genome does not encode proteins. Many of these noncoding regions contain important regulatory sequences that control gene expression. To date, most studies have focused on activators such as enhancers, but regions that repress gene expression—silencers—have not been systematically studied. We have developed a system that identifies silencer regions in a genome-wide fashion on the basis of silencer-mediated transcriptional repression of caspase 9. We found that silencers are widely distributed and may function in a tissue-specific fashion. These silencers harbor unique epigenetic signatures and are associated with specific transcription factors. Silencers also act at multiple genes, and at the level of chromosomal domains and long-range interactions. Deletion of silencer regions linked to the drug transporter genes ABCC2 and ABCG2 caused chemo-resistance. Overall, our study demonstrates that tissue-specific silencing is widespread throughout the human genome and probably contributes substantially to the regulation of gene expression and human biology.
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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Gruber, X. Li, E. Monte, K. Van Bortle, C. Jiang and M. Shi at Stanford University, and L. Janssen, Y. Li, L. Hamoen and A. Henic at Leiden University Medical Center, for many helpful discussions and inputs regarding the manuscript. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH; nos. U54HG006996 and UM1HG009442) to M.P.S. This work used the Genome Sequencing Service Center of Stanford Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine Sequencing Center, supported by NIH grant award nos. S10OD020141 and S10OD025212. B.P. was partially supported by the LUMC Gisela Thier Fellowship and KWF/Alpe Young Investigator Grant no. 11707.
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B.P. and M.P.S. conceived the project. B.P. designed and performed experiments and analyses. B.P. and M.P.S. wrote the manuscript.
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M.P.S. is a founder and member of the science advisory board of Personalis, SensOmics, Qbio, January, Mirvie and Filtricine, and a science advisory board member of Genapsys and Epinomics.
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Extended data
Extended Data Fig. 1 ReSE screen results from K562 cells.
(a) The genome is split into bins of 1000 bp. For each bin, the number of reads found in each sample is counted. All regions were included. Spearman correlation was used to calculate the correlation efficiency among all 4 samples. (b) ReSE screen results from two biological replicate experiments in K562 cells. Each circle represents one tested fragment. The y-axis indicates the FDR of enrichment of the ReSE fragments after induction of apoptosis compared with untreated control cells. The size of the circle indicates the fold enrichment of ReSE fragment counts of apoptosis-induction samples over untreated control after normalization. The red line indicates the cutoff value of FDR at 0.01.
Extended Data Fig. 2 Luciferase assays to determine the repressive activity of regions from K562 cells.
Silencer regions ranked on the bottom of the list based on the FDR value (a) or random regions from the screen (b) were cloned by PCR from the genomic DNA of K562 cells, and then inserted upstream of the promoter of a luciferase reporter plasmid pGL4.53. The 293T cells were used as the control cell line to control for cell-type dependent repressive activity, and the empty pGL4.53 plasmid was used as the control for the baseline luciferase activity. The Y-axis represents the percentage of luciferase activity compared to the pGL4.53 empty plasmids in the respective cells (n = 3 biological independent samples; the bars show the mean value ± S.E.M; *P value < 0.05, calculated using two-sided Student’s t test). All exact P values are provided in the Source Data.
Extended Data Fig. 3 Gene up-regulation by removing silencers from endogenous regions in K562 cells.
Three silencers from (Fig. 1e) are in the intron regions of genes HRH1 (a), SYNE2 (b) and CDH23 (c). Paired CRISPR guide RNAs were designed to target both sides of the selected silencer to remove it from the endogenous locus. Single clones were selected and verified by PCR (upper panel), which is the representative result of 2 experiments. The expression of the respective genes was quantified by qPCR (lower panel). (n = 3 biological replicates of the same clones; the bars show the mean value ± S.D.; *P value < 0.05, calculated using two-sided Student’s t test). All exact P values are provided in the Source Data. The blots were cropped. Full scans of the blots are shown in Source Data Full Gel Extended Data Fig. 3.
Extended Data Fig. 4 ReSE screen results from K562 cells differentiated with PMA.
(a) ReSE screen results from two biological replicate experiments in K562 cells treated with PMA. Each circle represents one tested fragment. The y-axis indicates the FDR of the enrichment of the ReSE fragments after induction of apoptosis compared with untreated control cells. The size of the circle indicates the fold enrichment of the ReSE fragment counts of the apoptosis-induction samples over the untreated control after normalization. The red line indicates the cutoff value of FDR at 0.01. (b) RNA-seq experiments were performed on the cell subsamples from (a). DEseq2 was used to calculate the genes deregulated in the cells with PMA treatment compared to the non-treated K562 cells. Around 4666 genes were changed at least 2 fold with the adjusted P value less than 0.01 during the PMA treatment (red dots). Two biological replicates were included for each condition. (c) Comparison of silencer regions identified from K562 cells and K562 cells differentiated by PMA. The overlapping was not random as determined by permutation tests (n = 20,000, adjust P value = 0.00005).
Extended Data Fig. 5 ReSE screen results from HepG2 cells.
(a) The genome is split into bins of 1000 bp. For each bin, the number of reads found in each sample is counted. All regions were included. Spearman correlation was used to calculate the correlation efficiency among all 4 samples. (b) ReSE screen results from two biological replicate experiments in HepG2 cells. Each circle represents one tested fragment. The y-axis indicates the FDR of the enrichment of the ReSE fragments after induction of apoptosis compared with the untreated control cells. The size of the circle indicates the fold enrichment of ReSE fragment counts of the apoptosis-induction samples over the untreated control after normalization. The red line indicates the cutoff value of FDR at 0.01.
Extended Data Fig. 6 Silencer regions identified from HepG2 cells.
(a) Luciferase assays to determine the repressive activity of silencers from K562 and HepG2 cells. Silencer regions were cloned by PCR from the genomic DNA of K562 cells into a luciferase reporter plasmid pGL4.53. The 293T cells were used as the control cell line and the empty pGL4.53 plasmid was used as the control for the baseline luciferase activity. The Y-axis represents the percentage of luciferase activity compared to the pGL4.53 empty plasmids in the respective cells. Part of the data from K562 bottom ranked silencers were also used in Extended Data Fig. 2 (n = 3 biological independent samples; the bars show the mean value ± S.E.M; *P value < 0.05, calculated using two-sided Student’s t test). (b) Distribution of the significantly enriched silencer regions from HepG2 cells in the genome. The pie chart indicates the distribution of silencers in genomic features. The bar plot indicates the distribution of silencers in the overlapping annotation features in the genome. All exact P values are provided in the Source Data.
Extended Data Fig. 7 Unique signatures in silencer regions from HepG2 cells.
(a) Distribution of silencer regions in the respective chromatin states in HepG2 cells. (Txn, transcription; Repressed, Polycomb repressed; lo, low signal; CNV, copy number variation). Colored wedges indicate the chromatin states that are significantly enriched compared to the library background distribution (P value < 0.001, one-sided binomial test). (b) Association of histone modifications with silencers in HepG2 cells. The y-axis indicates the significance of the enrichment of histone modifications with silencer fragments. The size of the circle indicates the ratio of silencers covered by the respective histone modification (scale, 0-1). The enrichment analysis is based on permutation tests using 20,000 random permutations. The P values were calculated and multiple comparison corrections were computed using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure. The red line shows the cutoff of the adjusted P value < 0.05. (c) Association of transcription factors with silencers in HepG2 cells. The y-axis indicates the significance of the enrichment of transcription factors with silencer fragments. The size of the circle indicates the ratio of silencers covered by the respective transcription factor (scale, 0-1). The enrichment analysis is based on permutation tests using 20,000 random permutations. The P values were calculated and multiple comparison corrections were computed using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure. The red line shows the cutoff of the adjusted P value < 0.05. All exact P values are provided in the Source Data.
Extended Data Fig. 8 Additional top motifs present in the silencer regions from K562 or HepG2 cells.
Related to Fig. 3d,e,f. Top motifs identified in the silencers regions from K562 (a) or HepG2 (b) cells are shown.
Extended Data Fig. 9 Additional silencer knockout clones from K562 and 293T cells.
Related to Fig. 4c,d,e,f. Additional clones where silencer was knocked out from the ABCC2 gene (a) or ABCG2 gene (c) in K562 cells were generated, and confirmed by PCR. The expressions of ABCC2 gene (b) and ABCG2 gene (d) of the respective cells were quantified by qPCR. Clones where silencer was knocked out from the ABCC2 gene (e) or ABCG2 gene (g) in 293T cells were also generated, and confirmed by PCR. The expressions of ABCC2 gene (f) and ABCG2 gene (h) of the respective cells were quantified by qPCR (For all qPCR experiments, n = 3 biological replicates of the same clones; the bars show the mean value ± S.D.; *P value < 0.05, calculated using two-sided Student’s t test. All PCR experiments are the representative results of 2 experiments). (i and j) Silencer knockout clones (from Extended Data Fig. 3) were used as additional control knockout clones, since the targeted deletion regions were completely different from the ABCC2 or ABCG2 silencer regions. The expression of ABCC2 (i) and ABCG2 (j) genes of these clones was quantified by qPCR. The expression data of all individual clones were grouped as the control set, and compared to that of all the ABCC2 or ABCG2 silencer knockout clones (for each individual clone, n = 3 biological replicates of the same clones; the bars show the mean value ± S.D.). The ABCC2 and ABCG2 genes were significantly up-regulated in ABCC2 silencer or ABCG2 silencer knockout clones respectively (*P value < 0.05, calculated using one-sided Student’s t test). All exact P values are provided in the Source Data. The blots were cropped. Full scans of the blots are shown in Source Data Full Gel Extended Data Fig. 9.
Extended Data Fig. 10 Long-range interactions of silencers with distal genes.
(a) Related to Fig. 5d. Direct interactions of silencers with the promoters of distal genes as identified by the 5C data from K562 cells. The red arrow indicates the silencer region, and the blue arrow shows the interaction region of genes. Interaction arcs are highlighted in blue. (b) Related to Fig. 5e. K562 RNA-seq data is shown for genes that interact with silencers as identified by the 5C data from K562 cells.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figs. 1–11 and Source Data Full Gel for Supplementary Fig. 3
Supplementary Table 1
Silencers identified from K562 cells using FDR cutoff of 0.01. MAGeCK algorithm based on a negative binomial model was used to identify significantly enriched silencers. Genomic location, FDR and fold enrichment are listed.
Supplementary Table 2
Silencers identified from K562 cells treated with PMA using FDR cutoff of 0.01. MAGeCK algorithm based on a negative binomial model was used to identify significantly enriched silencers. Genomic location, FDR and fold enrichment are listed.
Supplementary Table 3
Silencers identified from HepG2 cells using FDR cutoff of 0.01. MAGeCK algorithm based on a negative binomial model was used to identify significantly enriched silencers. Genomic location, FDR and fold enrichment are listed.
Supplementary Table 4
Pathway enrichment of genes that harbor silencers within 10 kb of TSS of genes in K562 cells. Canonical pathways enriched in gene sets containing silencers were calculated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis.
Supplementary Table 5
Pathway enrichment of genes that harbor silencers within 10 kb of TSS of genes in HepG2 cells. Canonical pathways enriched in gene sets containing silencers were calculated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis.
Supplementary Table 6
Pathway enrichment of genes that harbor silencers in the promoter (1 kb surrounding TSS) and the body of genes in K562 cells. Canonical pathways enriched in gene sets containing silencers were calculated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis.
Supplementary Table 7
Pathway enrichment of genes that harbor silencers in the promoter (1 kb surrounding TSS) and the body of genes in HepG2 cells. Canonical pathways enriched in gene sets containing silencers were calculated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis.
Supplementary Table 8
Promoter regions interacting with silencer regions identified by ReSE in K562 cells. Capture Hi-C data profiling interactions with 31,253 promoter regions from human primary blood cells were used. The interaction regions (oe) were intersected with silencers identified from K562 cells to identify potential genes.
Supplementary Table 9
Related information on tested regions. All tested regions and associated primers are listed.
Supplementary Dataset 1
Statistical source data for Supplementary Fig. 10.
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Pang, B., Snyder, M.P. Systematic identification of silencers in human cells. Nat Genet 52, 254–263 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-020-0578-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-020-0578-5
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