Wednesday, September 5, 2012

The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome

The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome:
The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome

Nature 489, 7414 (2012). doi:10.1038/nature11232

Authors: Robert E. Thurman, Eric Rynes, Richard Humbert, Jeff Vierstra, Matthew T. Maurano, Eric Haugen, Nathan C. Sheffield, Andrew B. Stergachis, Hao Wang, Benjamin Vernot, Kavita Garg, Sam John, Richard Sandstrom, Daniel Bates, Lisa Boatman, Theresa K. Canfield, Morgan Diegel, Douglas Dunn, Abigail K. Ebersol, Tristan Frum, Erika Giste, Audra K. Johnson, Ericka M. Johnson, Tanya Kutyavin, Bryan Lajoie, Bum-Kyu Lee, Kristen Lee, Darin London, Dimitra Lotakis, Shane Neph, Fidencio Neri, Eric D. Nguyen, Hongzhu Qu, Alex P. Reynolds, Vaughn Roach, Alexias Safi, Minerva E. Sanchez, Amartya Sanyal, Anthony Shafer, Jeremy M. Simon, Lingyun Song, Shinny Vong, Molly Weaver, Yongqi Yan, Zhancheng Zhang, Zhuzhu Zhang, Boris Lenhard, Muneesh Tewari, Michael O. Dorschner, R. Scott Hansen, Patrick A. Navas, George Stamatoyannopoulos, Vishwanath R. Iyer, Jason D. Lieb, Shamil R. Sunyaev, Joshua M. Akey, Peter J. Sabo, Rajinder Kaul, Terrence S. Furey, Job Dekker, Gregory E. Crawford & John A. Stamatoyannopoulos
DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) are markers of regulatory DNA and have underpinned the discovery of all classes of cis-regulatory elements including enhancers, promoters, insulators, silencers and locus control regions. Here we present the first extensive map of human DHSs identified through genome-wide profiling in

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