DiRE: identifying distant regulatory elements of co-expressed genes

V Gotea, I Ovcharenko - Nucleic acids research, 2008 - academic.oup.com
V Gotea, I Ovcharenko
Nucleic acids research, 2008academic.oup.com
Regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic genomes is established through a complex
cooperative activity of proximal promoters and distant regulatory elements (REs) such as
enhancers, repressors and silencers. We have developed a web server named DiRE, based
on the Enhancer Identification (EI) method, for predicting distant regulatory elements in
higher eukaryotic genomes, namely for determining their chromosomal location and
functional characteristics. The server uses gene co-expression data, comparative genomics …
Abstract
Regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic genomes is established through a complex cooperative activity of proximal promoters and distant regulatory elements (REs) such as enhancers, repressors and silencers. We have developed a web server named DiRE, based on the Enhancer Identification (EI) method, for predicting distant regulatory elements in higher eukaryotic genomes, namely for determining their chromosomal location and functional characteristics. The server uses gene co-expression data, comparative genomics and profiles of transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) to determine TFBS-association signatures that can be used for discriminating specific regulatory functions. DiRE's unique feature is its ability to detect REs outside of proximal promoter regions, as it takes advantage of the full gene locus to conduct the search. DiRE can predict common REs for any set of input genes for which the user has prior knowledge of co-expression, co-function or other biologically meaningful grouping. The server predicts function-specific REs consisting of clusters of specifically-associated TFBSs and it also scores the association of individual transcription factors (TFs) with the biological function shared by the group of input genes. Its integration with the Array2BIO server allows users to start their analysis with raw microarray expression data. The DiRE web server is freely available at http://dire.dcode.org .
Oxford University Press