Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity

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Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity. / van Duin, Lucas; Krautz, Robert; Rennie, Sarah; Andersson, Robin.

In: Molecular Systems Biology, Vol. 19, No. 7, e11392, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

van Duin, L, Krautz, R, Rennie, S & Andersson, R 2023, 'Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity', Molecular Systems Biology, vol. 19, no. 7, e11392. https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.202211392

APA

van Duin, L., Krautz, R., Rennie, S., & Andersson, R. (2023). Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity. Molecular Systems Biology, 19(7), [e11392]. https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.202211392

Vancouver

van Duin L, Krautz R, Rennie S, Andersson R. Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity. Molecular Systems Biology. 2023;19(7). e11392. https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.202211392

Author

van Duin, Lucas ; Krautz, Robert ; Rennie, Sarah ; Andersson, Robin. / Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity. In: Molecular Systems Biology. 2023 ; Vol. 19, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{03a71d71a911436a8c240f4400f10f80,
title = "Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity",
abstract = "Many genes are co-expressed and form genomic domains of coordinated gene activity. However, the regulatory determinants of domain co-activity remain unclear. Here, we leverage human individual variation in gene expression to characterize the co-regulatory processes underlying domain co-activity and systematically quantify their effect sizes. We employ transcriptional decomposition to extract from RNA expression data an expression component related to co-activity revealed by genomic positioning. This strategy reveals close to 1,500 co-activity domains, covering most expressed genes, of which the large majority are invariable across individuals. Focusing specifically on domains with high variability in co-activity reveals that contained genes have a higher sharing of eQTLs, a higher variability in enhancer interactions, and an enrichment of binding by variably expressed transcription factors, compared to genes within non-variable domains. Through careful quantification of the relative contributions of regulatory processes underlying co-activity, we find transcription factor expression levels to be the main determinant of gene co-activity. Our results indicate that distal trans effects contribute more than local genetic variation to individual variation in co-activity domains.",
keywords = "co-activity domains, co-regulation, gene regulation, individual variation, transcriptional decomposition",
author = "{van Duin}, Lucas and Robert Krautz and Sarah Rennie and Robin Andersson",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.15252/msb.202211392",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "Molecular Systems Biology",
issn = "1744-4292",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transcription factor expression is the main determinant of variability in gene co-activity

AU - van Duin, Lucas

AU - Krautz, Robert

AU - Rennie, Sarah

AU - Andersson, Robin

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Many genes are co-expressed and form genomic domains of coordinated gene activity. However, the regulatory determinants of domain co-activity remain unclear. Here, we leverage human individual variation in gene expression to characterize the co-regulatory processes underlying domain co-activity and systematically quantify their effect sizes. We employ transcriptional decomposition to extract from RNA expression data an expression component related to co-activity revealed by genomic positioning. This strategy reveals close to 1,500 co-activity domains, covering most expressed genes, of which the large majority are invariable across individuals. Focusing specifically on domains with high variability in co-activity reveals that contained genes have a higher sharing of eQTLs, a higher variability in enhancer interactions, and an enrichment of binding by variably expressed transcription factors, compared to genes within non-variable domains. Through careful quantification of the relative contributions of regulatory processes underlying co-activity, we find transcription factor expression levels to be the main determinant of gene co-activity. Our results indicate that distal trans effects contribute more than local genetic variation to individual variation in co-activity domains.

AB - Many genes are co-expressed and form genomic domains of coordinated gene activity. However, the regulatory determinants of domain co-activity remain unclear. Here, we leverage human individual variation in gene expression to characterize the co-regulatory processes underlying domain co-activity and systematically quantify their effect sizes. We employ transcriptional decomposition to extract from RNA expression data an expression component related to co-activity revealed by genomic positioning. This strategy reveals close to 1,500 co-activity domains, covering most expressed genes, of which the large majority are invariable across individuals. Focusing specifically on domains with high variability in co-activity reveals that contained genes have a higher sharing of eQTLs, a higher variability in enhancer interactions, and an enrichment of binding by variably expressed transcription factors, compared to genes within non-variable domains. Through careful quantification of the relative contributions of regulatory processes underlying co-activity, we find transcription factor expression levels to be the main determinant of gene co-activity. Our results indicate that distal trans effects contribute more than local genetic variation to individual variation in co-activity domains.

KW - co-activity domains

KW - co-regulation

KW - gene regulation

KW - individual variation

KW - transcriptional decomposition

U2 - 10.15252/msb.202211392

DO - 10.15252/msb.202211392

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37158788

AN - SCOPUS:85158830433

VL - 19

JO - Molecular Systems Biology

JF - Molecular Systems Biology

SN - 1744-4292

IS - 7

M1 - e11392

ER -

ID: 370684395