Regulatory activity is the default DNA state in eukaryotes

Genomes encode for genes and non-coding DNA, both capable of transcriptional activity. However, unlike canonical genes, many transcripts from non-coding DNA have limited evidence of conservation or function. Here, to determine how much biological noise is expected from non-genic sequences, we quanti...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Nature structural & molecular biology 2024-03, Vol.31 (3), p.559-567
Hauptverfasser: Luthra, Ishika, Jensen, Cassandra, Chen, Xinyi E., Salaudeen, Asfar Lathif, Rafi, Abdul Muntakim, de Boer, Carl G.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Genomes encode for genes and non-coding DNA, both capable of transcriptional activity. However, unlike canonical genes, many transcripts from non-coding DNA have limited evidence of conservation or function. Here, to determine how much biological noise is expected from non-genic sequences, we quantify the regulatory activity of evolutionarily naive DNA using RNA-seq in yeast and computational predictions in humans. In yeast, more than 99% of naive DNA bases were transcribed. Unlike the evolved transcriptome, naive transcripts frequently overlapped with opposite sense transcripts, suggesting selection favored coherent gene structures in the yeast genome. In humans, regulation-associated chromatin activity is predicted to be common in naive dinucleotide-content-matched randomized DNA. Here, naive and evolved DNA have similar co-occurrence and cell-type specificity of chromatin marks, challenging these as indicators of selection. However, in both yeast and humans, extreme high activities were rare in naive DNA, suggesting they result from selection. Overall, basal regulatory activity seems to be the default, which selection can hone to evolve a function or, if detrimental, repress. Here, the authors ask how much regulatory activity DNA is expected to have in the absence of selection. In yeast and humans, they find that gene regulatory activity is common in evolutionarily naive DNA, suggesting that activity is not always indicative of function.
ISSN:1545-9993
1545-9985
DOI:10.1038/s41594-024-01235-4