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Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements

Inter-individual variation in gene regulatory elements is hypothesized to play a causative role in adverse drug reactions and reduced drug activity. However, relatively little is known about the location and function of drug-dependent elements. To uncover drug-associated elements in a genome-wide ma...

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Autores principales: Smith, Robin P., Eckalbar, Walter L., Morrissey, Kari M., Luizon, Marcelo R., Hoffmann, Thomas J., Sun, Xuefeng, Jones, Stacy L., Force Aldred, Shelley, Ramamoorthy, Anuradha, Desta, Zeruesenay, Liu, Yunlong, Skaar, Todd C., Trinklein, Nathan D., Giacomini, Kathleen M., Ahituv, Nadav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4183418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25275310
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004648
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author Smith, Robin P.
Eckalbar, Walter L.
Morrissey, Kari M.
Luizon, Marcelo R.
Hoffmann, Thomas J.
Sun, Xuefeng
Jones, Stacy L.
Force Aldred, Shelley
Ramamoorthy, Anuradha
Desta, Zeruesenay
Liu, Yunlong
Skaar, Todd C.
Trinklein, Nathan D.
Giacomini, Kathleen M.
Ahituv, Nadav
author_facet Smith, Robin P.
Eckalbar, Walter L.
Morrissey, Kari M.
Luizon, Marcelo R.
Hoffmann, Thomas J.
Sun, Xuefeng
Jones, Stacy L.
Force Aldred, Shelley
Ramamoorthy, Anuradha
Desta, Zeruesenay
Liu, Yunlong
Skaar, Todd C.
Trinklein, Nathan D.
Giacomini, Kathleen M.
Ahituv, Nadav
author_sort Smith, Robin P.
collection PubMed
description Inter-individual variation in gene regulatory elements is hypothesized to play a causative role in adverse drug reactions and reduced drug activity. However, relatively little is known about the location and function of drug-dependent elements. To uncover drug-associated elements in a genome-wide manner, we performed RNA-seq and ChIP-seq using antibodies against the pregnane X receptor (PXR) and three active regulatory marks (p300, H3K4me1, H3K27ac) on primary human hepatocytes treated with rifampin or vehicle control. Rifampin and PXR were chosen since they are part of the CYP3A4 pathway, which is known to account for the metabolism of more than 50% of all prescribed drugs. We selected 227 proximal promoters for genes with rifampin-dependent expression or nearby PXR/p300 occupancy sites and assayed their ability to induce luciferase in rifampin-treated HepG2 cells, finding only 10 (4.4%) that exhibited drug-dependent activity. As this result suggested a role for distal enhancer modules, we searched more broadly to identify 1,297 genomic regions bearing a conditional PXR occupancy as well as all three active regulatory marks. These regions are enriched near genes that function in the metabolism of xenobiotics, specifically members of the cytochrome P450 family. We performed enhancer assays in rifampin-treated HepG2 cells for 42 of these sequences as well as 7 sequences that overlap linkage-disequilibrium blocks defined by lead SNPs from pharmacogenomic GWAS studies, revealing 15/42 and 4/7 to be functional enhancers, respectively. A common African haplotype in one of these enhancers in the GSTA locus was found to exhibit potential rifampin hypersensitivity. Combined, our results further suggest that enhancers are the predominant targets of rifampin-induced PXR activation, provide a genome-wide catalog of PXR targets and serve as a model for the identification of drug-responsive regulatory elements.
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spelling pubmed-41834182014-10-07 Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements Smith, Robin P. Eckalbar, Walter L. Morrissey, Kari M. Luizon, Marcelo R. Hoffmann, Thomas J. Sun, Xuefeng Jones, Stacy L. Force Aldred, Shelley Ramamoorthy, Anuradha Desta, Zeruesenay Liu, Yunlong Skaar, Todd C. Trinklein, Nathan D. Giacomini, Kathleen M. Ahituv, Nadav PLoS Genet Research Article Inter-individual variation in gene regulatory elements is hypothesized to play a causative role in adverse drug reactions and reduced drug activity. However, relatively little is known about the location and function of drug-dependent elements. To uncover drug-associated elements in a genome-wide manner, we performed RNA-seq and ChIP-seq using antibodies against the pregnane X receptor (PXR) and three active regulatory marks (p300, H3K4me1, H3K27ac) on primary human hepatocytes treated with rifampin or vehicle control. Rifampin and PXR were chosen since they are part of the CYP3A4 pathway, which is known to account for the metabolism of more than 50% of all prescribed drugs. We selected 227 proximal promoters for genes with rifampin-dependent expression or nearby PXR/p300 occupancy sites and assayed their ability to induce luciferase in rifampin-treated HepG2 cells, finding only 10 (4.4%) that exhibited drug-dependent activity. As this result suggested a role for distal enhancer modules, we searched more broadly to identify 1,297 genomic regions bearing a conditional PXR occupancy as well as all three active regulatory marks. These regions are enriched near genes that function in the metabolism of xenobiotics, specifically members of the cytochrome P450 family. We performed enhancer assays in rifampin-treated HepG2 cells for 42 of these sequences as well as 7 sequences that overlap linkage-disequilibrium blocks defined by lead SNPs from pharmacogenomic GWAS studies, revealing 15/42 and 4/7 to be functional enhancers, respectively. A common African haplotype in one of these enhancers in the GSTA locus was found to exhibit potential rifampin hypersensitivity. Combined, our results further suggest that enhancers are the predominant targets of rifampin-induced PXR activation, provide a genome-wide catalog of PXR targets and serve as a model for the identification of drug-responsive regulatory elements. Public Library of Science 2014-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4183418/ /pubmed/25275310 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004648 Text en © 2014 Smith et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, Robin P.
Eckalbar, Walter L.
Morrissey, Kari M.
Luizon, Marcelo R.
Hoffmann, Thomas J.
Sun, Xuefeng
Jones, Stacy L.
Force Aldred, Shelley
Ramamoorthy, Anuradha
Desta, Zeruesenay
Liu, Yunlong
Skaar, Todd C.
Trinklein, Nathan D.
Giacomini, Kathleen M.
Ahituv, Nadav
Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title_full Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title_fullStr Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title_full_unstemmed Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title_short Genome-Wide Discovery of Drug-Dependent Human Liver Regulatory Elements
title_sort genome-wide discovery of drug-dependent human liver regulatory elements
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4183418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25275310
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004648
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