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Dive into the research topics where Kristofer Davie is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristofer Davie.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Discovery of Transcription Factors and Regulatory Regions Driving In Vivo Tumor Development by ATAC-seq and FAIRE-seq Open Chromatin Profiling

Kristofer Davie; Jelle Jacobs; Mardelle Atkins; Delphine Potier; Valerie Christiaens; Georg Halder; Stein Aerts

Genomic enhancers regulate spatio-temporal gene expression by recruiting specific combinations of transcription factors (TFs). When TFs are bound to active regulatory regions, they displace canonical nucleosomes, making these regions biochemically detectable as nucleosome-depleted regions or accessible/open chromatin. Here we ask whether open chromatin profiling can be used to identify the entire repertoire of active promoters and enhancers underlying tissue-specific gene expression during normal development and oncogenesis in vivo. To this end, we first compare two different approaches to detect open chromatin in vivo using the Drosophila eye primordium as a model system: FAIRE-seq, based on physical separation of open versus closed chromatin; and ATAC-seq, based on preferential integration of a transposon into open chromatin. We find that both methods reproducibly capture the tissue-specific chromatin activity of regulatory regions, including promoters, enhancers, and insulators. Using both techniques, we screened for regulatory regions that become ectopically active during Ras-dependent oncogenesis, and identified 3778 regions that become (over-)activated during tumor development. Next, we applied motif discovery to search for candidate transcription factors that could bind these regions and identified AP-1 and Stat92E as key regulators. We validated the importance of Stat92E in the development of the tumors by introducing a loss of function Stat92E mutant, which was sufficient to rescue the tumor phenotype. Additionally we tested if the predicted Stat92E responsive regulatory regions are genuine, using ectopic induction of JAK/STAT signaling in developing eye discs, and observed that similar chromatin changes indeed occurred. Finally, we determine that these are functionally significant regulatory changes, as nearby target genes are up- or down-regulated. In conclusion, we show that FAIRE-seq and ATAC-seq based open chromatin profiling, combined with motif discovery, is a straightforward approach to identify functional genomic regulatory regions, master regulators, and gene regulatory networks controlling complex in vivo processes.


Cell Reports | 2014

Mapping Gene Regulatory Networks in Drosophila Eye Development by Large-Scale Transcriptome Perturbations and Motif Inference

Delphine Potier; Kristofer Davie; Gert Hulselmans; Marina Naval Sanchez; Lotte Haagen; Vân Anh Huynh-Thu; Duygu Koldere; Arzu Celik; Pierre Geurts; Valerie Christiaens; Stein Aerts

Genome control is operated by transcription factors (TFs) controlling their target genes by binding to promoters and enhancers. Conceptually, the interactions between TFs, their binding sites, and their functional targets are represented by gene regulatory networks (GRNs). Deciphering in vivo GRNs underlying organ development in an unbiased genome-wide setting involves identifying both functional TF-gene interactions and physical TF-DNA interactions. To reverse engineer the GRNs of eye development in Drosophila, we performed RNA-seq across 72 genetic perturbations and sorted cell types and inferred a coexpression network. Next, we derived direct TF-DNA interactions using computational motif inference, ultimately connecting 241 TFs to 5,632 direct target genes through 24,926 enhancers. Using this network, we found network motifs, cis-regulatory codes, and regulators of eye development. We validate the predicted target regions of Grainyhead by ChIP-seq and identify this factor as a general cofactor in the eye network, being bound to thousands of nucleosome-free regions.


Genome Research | 2016

Multiplex enhancer-reporter assays uncover unsophisticated TP53 enhancer logic

Annelien Verfaillie; Dmitry Svetlichnyy; Hana Imrichova; Kristofer Davie; Mark Fiers; Zeynep Kalender Atak; Gert Hulselmans; Valerie Christiaens; Stein Aerts

Transcription factors regulate their target genes by binding to regulatory regions in the genome. Although the binding preferences of TP53 are known, it remains unclear what distinguishes functional enhancers from nonfunctional binding. In addition, the genome is scattered with recognition sequences that remain unoccupied. Using two complementary techniques of multiplex enhancer-reporter assays, we discovered that functional enhancers could be discriminated from nonfunctional binding events by the occurrence of a single TP53 canonical motif. By combining machine learning with a meta-analysis of TP53 ChIP-seq data sets, we identified a core set of more than 1000 responsive enhancers in the human genome. This TP53 cistrome is invariably used between cell types and experimental conditions, whereas differences among experiments can be attributed to indirect nonfunctional binding events. Our data suggest that TP53 enhancers represent a class of unsophisticated cell-autonomous enhancers containing a single TP53 binding site, distinct from complex developmental enhancers that integrate signals from multiple transcription factors.


Cell | 2018

A Single-Cell Transcriptome Atlas of the Aging Drosophila Brain

Kristofer Davie; Jasper Janssens; Duygu Koldere; Maxime De Waegeneer; Uli Pech; Łukasz Kreft; Sara Aibar; Samira Makhzami; Valerie Christiaens; Suresh Poovathingal; Gert Hulselmans; Katina I. Spanier; Thomas Moerman; Bram Vanspauwen; Sarah Geurs; Thierry Voet; Jeroen Lammertyn; Bernard Thienpont; Sha Liu; Nikos Konstantinides; Mark Fiers; Patrik Verstreken; Stein Aerts

Summary The diversity of cell types and regulatory states in the brain, and how these change during aging, remains largely unknown. We present a single-cell transcriptome atlas of the entire adult Drosophila melanogaster brain sampled across its lifespan. Cell clustering identified 87 initial cell clusters that are further subclustered and validated by targeted cell-sorting. Our data show high granularity and identify a wide range of cell types. Gene network analyses using SCENIC revealed regulatory heterogeneity linked to energy consumption. During aging, RNA content declines exponentially without affecting neuronal identity in old brains. This single-cell brain atlas covers nearly all cells in the normal brain and provides the tools to study cellular diversity alongside other Drosophila and mammalian single-cell datasets in our unique single-cell analysis platform: SCope (http://scope.aertslab.org). These results, together with SCope, allow comprehensive exploration of all transcriptional states of an entire aging brain.


bioRxiv | 2017

A single-cell catalogue of regulatory states in the ageing Drosophila brain

Kristofer Davie; Jasper Janssens; Duygu Koldere; Uli Pech; Sara Aibar; Maxime De Waegeneer; Samira Makhzami; Valerie Christiaens; Gert Hulselmans; Katina I. Spanier; Thomas Moerman; Bram Vanspauwen; Jeroen Lammertyn; Bernard Thienpont; Sha Liu; Patrik Verstreken; Stein Aerts

The diversity of cell types and regulatory states in the brain, and how these change during ageing, remains largely unknown. Here, we present a single-cell transcriptome catalogue of the entire adult Drosophila melanogaster brain sampled across its lifespan. Both neurons and glia age through a process of “regulatory erosion”, characterized by a strong decline of RNA content, and accompanied by increasing transcriptional and chromatin noise. We identify more than 50 cell types by specific transcription factors and their downstream gene regulatory networks. In addition to neurotransmitter types and neuroblast lineages, we find a novel neuronal cell state driven by datilografo and prospero. This state relates to neuronal birth order, the metabolic profile, and the activity of a neuron. Our single-cell brain catalogue reveals extensive regulatory heterogeneity linked to ageing and brain function and will serve as a reference for future studies of genetic variation and disease mutations.


Nature Genetics | 2018

The transcription factor Grainy head primes epithelial enhancers for spatiotemporal activation by displacing nucleosomes

Jelle Jacobs; Mardelle Atkins; Kristofer Davie; Hana Imrichova; Lucia Romanelli; Valerie Christiaens; Gert Hulselmans; Delphine Potier; Jasper Wouters; Ibrahim Ihsan Taskiran; Giulia Paciello; Duygu Koldere; Sara Aibar; Georg Halder; Stein Aerts

Transcriptional enhancers function as docking platforms for combinations of transcription factors (TFs) to control gene expression. How enhancer sequences determine nucleosome occupancy, TF recruitment and transcriptional activation in vivo remains unclear. Using ATAC–seq across a panel of Drosophila inbred strains, we found that SNPs affecting binding sites of the TF Grainy head (Grh) causally determine the accessibility of epithelial enhancers. We show that deletion and ectopic expression of Grh cause loss and gain of DNA accessibility, respectively. However, although Grh binding is necessary for enhancer accessibility, it is insufficient to activate enhancers. Finally, we show that human Grh homologs—GRHL1, GRHL2 and GRHL3—function similarly. We conclude that Grh binding is necessary and sufficient for the opening of epithelial enhancers but not for their activation. Our data support a model positing that complex spatiotemporal expression patterns are controlled by regulatory hierarchies in which pioneer factors, such as Grh, establish tissue-specific accessible chromatin landscapes upon which other factors can act.The authors show that the transcription factor Grainy head (Grh) is necessary and sufficient for opening of epithelial enhancers, but not for their activation. Grh is shown to function as a pioneer factor, displacing nucleosomes and paving the way for other transcription factors to activate enhancers.


bioRxiv | 2018

Cis-topic modelling of single cell epigenomes

Liesbeth Minnoye; Dafni Papasokrati; Sara Aibar; Gert Hulselmans; Valerie Christiaens; Kristofer Davie; Jasper Wouters; Stein Aerts

Single-cell epigenomics provides new opportunities to decipher genomic regulatory programs from heterogeneous samples and dynamic processes. We present a probabilistic framework called cisTopic, to simultaneously discover “cis-regulatory topics” and stable cell states from sparse single-cell epigenomics data. After benchmarking cisTopic on single-cell ATAC-seq data, single-cell DNA methylation data, and semi-simulated single-cell ChIP-seq data, we use cisTopic to predict regulatory programs in the human brain and validate these by aligning them with co-expression networks derived from single-cell RNA-seq data. Next, we performed a time-series single-cell ATAC-seq experiment after SOX10 perturbations in melanoma cultures, where cisTopic revealed dynamic regulatory topics driven by SOX10 and AP-1. Finally, machine learning and enhancer modelling approaches allowed to predict cell type specific SOX10 and SOX9 binding sites based on topic specific co-regulatory motifs. cisTopic is available as an R/Bioconductor package at http://github.com/aertslab/cistopic.


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Archive | 2016

Studying cellular differentiation in Drosophila using single cell ATAC-seq

Kristofer Davie; Jelle Jacobs; Valerie Christiaens; Stein Aerts


Archive | 2015

A novel High-throughput Enhancer reporter assay reveals unsophisticated p53 enhancer logic

Annelien Verfaillie; Kristofer Davie; Dmitry Svetlichnyy; Mark Fiers; Stein Aerts

Collaboration


Dive into the Kristofer Davie's collaboration.

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Stein Aerts

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Valerie Christiaens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Gert Hulselmans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Duygu Koldere

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Delphine Potier

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jelle Jacobs

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Sara Aibar

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Mark Fiers

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Annelien Verfaillie

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Bernard Thienpont

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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