E. Preston
University of Washington
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Publication
Featured researches published by E. Preston.
Genome Research | 2011
Wei Niu; Zhi John Lu; Mei Zhong; Mihail Sarov; John I. Murray; Cathleen M. Brdlik; J. Janette; Chao Chen; Pedro Alves; E. Preston; Cindie Slightham; Lixia Jiang; Anthony A. Hyman; Stuart K. Kim; Robert H. Waterston; Mark Gerstein; Michael Snyder; Valerie Reinke
Regulation of gene expression by sequence-specific transcription factors is central to developmental programs and depends on the binding of transcription factors with target sites in the genome. To date, most such analyses in Caenorhabditis elegans have focused on the interactions between a single transcription factor with one or a few select target genes. As part of the modENCODE Consortium, we have used chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) to determine the genome-wide binding sites of 22 transcription factors (ALR-1, BLMP-1, CEH-14, CEH-30, EGL-27, EGL-5, ELT-3, EOR-1, GEI-11, HLH-1, LIN-11, LIN-13, LIN-15B, LIN-39, MAB-5, MDL-1, MEP-1, PES-1, PHA-4, PQM-1, SKN-1, and UNC-130) at diverse developmental stages. For each factor we determined candidate gene targets, both coding and non-coding. The typical binding sites of almost all factors are within a few hundred nucleotides of the transcript start site. Most factors target a mixture of coding and non-coding target genes, although one factor preferentially binds to non-coding RNA genes. We built a regulatory network among the 22 factors to determine their functional relationships to each other and found that some factors appear to act preferentially as regulators and others as target genes. Examination of the binding targets of three related HOX factors--LIN-39, MAB-5, and EGL-5--indicates that these factors regulate genes involved in cellular migration, neuronal function, and vulval differentiation, consistent with their known roles in these developmental processes. Ultimately, the comprehensive mapping of transcription factor binding sites will identify features of transcriptional networks that regulate C. elegans developmental processes.
Cell | 2012
Mihail Sarov; John I. Murray; Kristin Schanze; Andrei Pozniakovski; Wei Niu; Karolin Angermann; Susanne Hasse; Michaela Rupprecht; Elisabeth Vinis; Matthew Tinney; E. Preston; Andrea Zinke; Susanne Enst; Tina Teichgraber; J. Janette; Kadri Reis; Stephan Janosch; Siegfried Schloissnig; Radoslaw Kamil Ejsmont; C. Slightam; Xiao Xu; Stuart K. Kim; Valerie Reinke; A. Francis Stewart; Michael Snyder; Robert H. Waterston; Anthony A. Hyman
Understanding the in vivo dynamics of protein localization and their physical interactions is important for many problems in biology. To enable systematic protein function interrogation in a multicellular context, we built a genome-scale transgenic platform for in vivo expression of fluorescent- and affinity-tagged proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans under endogenous cis regulatory control. The platform combines computer-assisted transgene design, massively parallel DNA engineering, and next-generation sequencing to generate a resource of 14,637 genomic DNA transgenes, which covers 73% of the proteome. The multipurpose tag used allows any protein of interest to be localized in vivo or affinity purified using standard tag-based assays. We illustrate the utility of the resource by systematic chromatin immunopurification and automated 4D imaging, which produced detailed DNA binding and cell/tissue distribution maps for key transcription factor proteins.
PLOS Genetics | 2010
Mei-fang Zhong; Wei Niu; Zhi John Lu; Mihail Sarov; John I. Murray; J. Janette; Debasish Raha; Karyn L. Sheaffer; Hugo Y. K. Lam; E. Preston; Cindie Slightham; LaDeana W. Hillier; Trisha J. Brock; Ashish Agarwal; Raymond K. Auerbach; Anthony A. Hyman; Mark Gerstein; Susan E. Mango; Stuart K. Kim; Robert H. Waterston; Valerie Reinke; Michael Snyder
Transcription factors are key components of regulatory networks that control development, as well as the response to environmental stimuli. We have established an experimental pipeline in Caenorhabditis elegans that permits global identification of the binding sites for transcription factors using chromatin immunoprecipitation and deep sequencing. We describe and validate this strategy, and apply it to the transcription factor PHA-4, which plays critical roles in organ development and other cellular processes. We identified thousands of binding sites for PHA-4 during formation of the embryonic pharynx, and also found a role for this factor during the starvation response. Many binding sites were found to shift dramatically between embryos and starved larvae, from developmentally regulated genes to genes involved in metabolism. These results indicate distinct roles for this regulator in two different biological processes and demonstrate the versatility of transcription factors in mediating diverse biological roles.
Cell | 2009
Xiao Liu; Fuhui Long; Hanchuan Peng; Sarah J. Aerni; Min Jiang; Adolfo Sánchez-Blanco; John I. Murray; E. Preston; Barbara Mericle; Serafim Batzoglou; Eugene W. Myers; Stuart K. Kim
The C. elegans cell lineage provides a unique opportunity to look at how cell lineage affects patterns of gene expression. We developed an automatic cell lineage analyzer that converts high-resolution images of worms into a data table showing fluorescence expression with single-cell resolution. We generated expression profiles of 93 genes in 363 specific cells from L1 stage larvae and found that cells with identical fates can be formed by different gene regulatory pathways. Molecular signatures identified repeating cell fate modules within the cell lineage and enabled the generation of a molecular differentiation map that reveals points in the cell lineage when developmental fates of daughter cells begin to diverge. These results demonstrate insights that become possible using computational approaches to analyze quantitative expression from many genes in parallel using a digital gene expression atlas.
The FASEB Journal | 2008
Robert H. Waterston; John Isaac Murphy; Zhirong Bao; Daniel Blick; Max E. Boeck; Thomas J. Boyle; Barbara Mericle; E. Preston; Matt J. Sandel; Zhongying Zhao