Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.

A "bidirectional gene pair" comprises two adjacent genes whose transcription start sites are neighboring and directed away from each other. The intervening regulatory region is called a "bidirectional promoter." These promoters are often associated with genes that function in DNA...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mary Q Yang, Laura M Koehly, Laura L Elnitski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-04-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030072
id doaj-542034808d3646b3a1524d774c8d36f0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-542034808d3646b3a1524d774c8d36f02021-04-21T15:21:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582007-04-0134e7210.1371/journal.pcbi.0030072Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.Mary Q YangLaura M KoehlyLaura L ElnitskiA "bidirectional gene pair" comprises two adjacent genes whose transcription start sites are neighboring and directed away from each other. The intervening regulatory region is called a "bidirectional promoter." These promoters are often associated with genes that function in DNA repair, with the potential to participate in the development of cancer. No connection between these gene pairs and cancer has been previously investigated. Using the database of spliced-expressed sequence tags (ESTs), we identified the most complete collection of human transcripts under the control of bidirectional promoters. A rigorous screen of the spliced EST data identified new bidirectional promoters, many of which functioned as alternative promoters or regulated novel transcripts. Additionally, we show a highly significant enrichment of bidirectional promoters in genes implicated in somatic cancer, including a substantial number of genes implicated in breast and ovarian cancers. The repeated use of this promoter structure in the human genome suggests it could regulate co-expression patterns among groups of genes. Using microarray expression data from 79 human tissues, we verify regulatory networks among genes controlled by bidirectional promoters. Subsets of these promoters contain similar combinations of transcription factor binding sites, including evolutionarily conserved ETS factor binding sites in ERBB2, FANCD2, and BRCA2. Interpreting the regulation of genes involved in co-expression networks, especially those involved in cancer, will be an important step toward defining molecular events that may contribute to disease.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030072
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mary Q Yang
Laura M Koehly
Laura L Elnitski
spellingShingle Mary Q Yang
Laura M Koehly
Laura L Elnitski
Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Mary Q Yang
Laura M Koehly
Laura L Elnitski
author_sort Mary Q Yang
title Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
title_short Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
title_full Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
title_fullStr Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
title_full_unstemmed Comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
title_sort comprehensive annotation of bidirectional promoters identifies co-regulation among breast and ovarian cancer genes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2007-04-01
description A "bidirectional gene pair" comprises two adjacent genes whose transcription start sites are neighboring and directed away from each other. The intervening regulatory region is called a "bidirectional promoter." These promoters are often associated with genes that function in DNA repair, with the potential to participate in the development of cancer. No connection between these gene pairs and cancer has been previously investigated. Using the database of spliced-expressed sequence tags (ESTs), we identified the most complete collection of human transcripts under the control of bidirectional promoters. A rigorous screen of the spliced EST data identified new bidirectional promoters, many of which functioned as alternative promoters or regulated novel transcripts. Additionally, we show a highly significant enrichment of bidirectional promoters in genes implicated in somatic cancer, including a substantial number of genes implicated in breast and ovarian cancers. The repeated use of this promoter structure in the human genome suggests it could regulate co-expression patterns among groups of genes. Using microarray expression data from 79 human tissues, we verify regulatory networks among genes controlled by bidirectional promoters. Subsets of these promoters contain similar combinations of transcription factor binding sites, including evolutionarily conserved ETS factor binding sites in ERBB2, FANCD2, and BRCA2. Interpreting the regulation of genes involved in co-expression networks, especially those involved in cancer, will be an important step toward defining molecular events that may contribute to disease.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030072
work_keys_str_mv AT maryqyang comprehensiveannotationofbidirectionalpromotersidentifiescoregulationamongbreastandovariancancergenes
AT lauramkoehly comprehensiveannotationofbidirectionalpromotersidentifiescoregulationamongbreastandovariancancergenes
AT lauralelnitski comprehensiveannotationofbidirectionalpromotersidentifiescoregulationamongbreastandovariancancergenes
_version_ 1714667388207628288