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Dive into the research topics where Richard Sandstrom is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard Sandstrom.


Science | 2009

Comprehensive mapping of long range interactions reveals folding principles of the human genome

Erez Lieberman-Aiden; Nynke L. van Berkum; Louise Williams; Maxim Imakaev; Tobias Ragoczy; Agnes Telling; Ido Amit; Bryan R. Lajoie; Peter J. Sabo; Michael O. Dorschner; Richard Sandstrom; Bradley E. Bernstein; Michael Bender; Mark Groudine; Andreas Gnirke; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos; Leonid A. Mirny; Eric S. Lander

Chromosomal Mapping The conformation of the genome in the nucleus and contacts between both proximal and distal loci influence gene expression. In order to map genomic contacts, Lieberman-Aiden et al. (p. 289, see the cover) developed a technique to allow the detection of all interactions between genomic loci in the eukaryotic nucleus followed by deep sequencing. This technology was used to map the organization of the human genome and to examine the spatial proximity of chromosomal loci at one megabase resolution. The map suggests that the genome is partitioned into two spatial compartments that are related to local chromatin state and whose remodeling correlates with changes in the chromatin state. Chromosomes are organized in a fractal knot-free conformation that is densely packed while easily folded and unfolded. We describe Hi-C, a method that probes the three-dimensional architecture of whole genomes by coupling proximity-based ligation with massively parallel sequencing. We constructed spatial proximity maps of the human genome with Hi-C at a resolution of 1 megabase. These maps confirm the presence of chromosome territories and the spatial proximity of small, gene-rich chromosomes. We identified an additional level of genome organization that is characterized by the spatial segregation of open and closed chromatin to form two genome-wide compartments. At the megabase scale, the chromatin conformation is consistent with a fractal globule, a knot-free, polymer conformation that enables maximally dense packing while preserving the ability to easily fold and unfold any genomic locus. The fractal globule is distinct from the more commonly used globular equilibrium model. Our results demonstrate the power of Hi-C to map the dynamic conformations of whole genomes.


Science | 2012

Systematic Localization of Common Disease-Associated Variation in Regulatory DNA

Matthew T. Maurano; Richard Humbert; Eric Rynes; Robert E. Thurman; Eric Haugen; Hao Wang; Alex Reynolds; Richard Sandstrom; Hongzhu Qu; Jennifer A. Brody; Anthony Shafer; Fidencio Neri; Kristen Lee; Tanya Kutyavin; Sandra Stehling-Sun; Audra K. Johnson; Theresa K. Canfield; Erika Giste; Morgan Diegel; Daniel Bates; R. Scott Hansen; Shane Neph; Peter J. Sabo; Shelly Heimfeld; Antony Raubitschek; Steven F. Ziegler; Chris Cotsapas; Nona Sotoodehnia; Ian A. Glass; Shamil R. Sunyaev

Predictions of Genetic Disease Many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified loci and variants associated with disease, but the ability to predict disease on the basis of these genetic variants remains small. Maurano et al. (p. 1190; see the Perspective by Schadt and Chang; see the cover) characterize the location of GWAS variants in the genome with respect to their proximity to regulatory DNA [marked by deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) hypersensitive sites] by tissue type, disease, and enrichments in physiologically relevant transcription factor binding sites and networks. They found many noncoding disease associations in regulatory DNA, indicating tissue and developmental-specific regulatory roles for many common genetic variants and thus enabling links to be made between gene regulation and adult-onset disease. Genetic variants that have been associated with diseases are concentrated in regulatory regions of the genome. Genome-wide association studies have identified many noncoding variants associated with common diseases and traits. We show that these variants are concentrated in regulatory DNA marked by deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) hypersensitive sites (DHSs). Eighty-eight percent of such DHSs are active during fetal development and are enriched in variants associated with gestational exposure–related phenotypes. We identified distant gene targets for hundreds of variant-containing DHSs that may explain phenotype associations. Disease-associated variants systematically perturb transcription factor recognition sequences, frequently alter allelic chromatin states, and form regulatory networks. We also demonstrated tissue-selective enrichment of more weakly disease-associated variants within DHSs and the de novo identification of pathogenic cell types for Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and an electrocardiogram trait, without prior knowledge of physiological mechanisms. Our results suggest pervasive involvement of regulatory DNA variation in common human disease and provide pathogenic insights into diverse disorders.


Nature | 2012

The accessible chromatin landscape of the human genome.

Robert E. Thurman; Eric Rynes; Richard Humbert; Jeff Vierstra; Matthew T. Maurano; Eric Haugen; Nathan C. Sheffield; Andrew B. Stergachis; Hao Wang; Benjamin Vernot; Kavita Garg; Sam John; Richard Sandstrom; Daniel Bates; Lisa Boatman; Theresa K. Canfield; Morgan Diegel; Douglas Dunn; Abigail K. Ebersol; Tristan Frum; Erika Giste; Audra K. Johnson; Ericka M. Johnson; Tanya Kutyavin; Bryan R. Lajoie; Bum Kyu Lee; Kristen Lee; Darin London; Dimitra Lotakis; Shane Neph

DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) are markers of regulatory DNA and have underpinned the discovery of all classes of cis-regulatory elements including enhancers, promoters, insulators, silencers and locus control regions. Here we present the first extensive map of human DHSs identified through genome-wide profiling in 125 diverse cell and tissue types. We identify ∼2.9 million DHSs that encompass virtually all known experimentally validated cis-regulatory sequences and expose a vast trove of novel elements, most with highly cell-selective regulation. Annotating these elements using ENCODE data reveals novel relationships between chromatin accessibility, transcription, DNA methylation and regulatory factor occupancy patterns. We connect ∼580,000 distal DHSs with their target promoters, revealing systematic pairing of different classes of distal DHSs and specific promoter types. Patterning of chromatin accessibility at many regulatory regions is organized with dozens to hundreds of co-activated elements, and the transcellular DNase I sensitivity pattern at a given region can predict cell-type-specific functional behaviours. The DHS landscape shows signatures of recent functional evolutionary constraint. However, the DHS compartment in pluripotent and immortalized cells exhibits higher mutation rates than that in highly differentiated cells, exposing an unexpected link between chromatin accessibility, proliferative potential and patterns of human variation.


Nature | 2011

Comprehensive analysis of the chromatin landscape in Drosophila melanogaster

Peter V. Kharchenko; Artyom A. Alekseyenko; Yuri B. Schwartz; Aki Minoda; Nicole C. Riddle; Jason Ernst; Peter J. Sabo; Erica Larschan; Andrey A. Gorchakov; Tingting Gu; Daniela Linder-Basso; Annette Plachetka; Gregory Shanower; Michael Y. Tolstorukov; Lovelace J. Luquette; Ruibin Xi; Youngsook L. Jung; Richard Park; Eric P. Bishop; Theresa P. Canfield; Richard Sandstrom; Robert E. Thurman; David M. MacAlpine; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos; Manolis Kellis; Sarah C. R. Elgin; Mitzi I. Kuroda; Vincenzo Pirrotta; Gary H. Karpen; Peter J. Park

Chromatin is composed of DNA and a variety of modified histones and non-histone proteins, which have an impact on cell differentiation, gene regulation and other key cellular processes. Here we present a genome-wide chromatin landscape for Drosophila melanogaster based on eighteen histone modifications, summarized by nine prevalent combinatorial patterns. Integrative analysis with other data (non-histone chromatin proteins, DNase I hypersensitivity, GRO-Seq reads produced by engaged polymerase, short/long RNA products) reveals discrete characteristics of chromosomes, genes, regulatory elements and other functional domains. We find that active genes display distinct chromatin signatures that are correlated with disparate gene lengths, exon patterns, regulatory functions and genomic contexts. We also demonstrate a diversity of signatures among Polycomb targets that include a subset with paused polymerase. This systematic profiling and integrative analysis of chromatin signatures provides insights into how genomic elements are regulated, and will serve as a resource for future experimental investigations of genome structure and function.


Nature | 2012

An expansive human regulatory lexicon encoded in transcription factor footprints

Shane Neph; Jeff Vierstra; Andrew B. Stergachis; Alex Reynolds; Eric Haugen; Benjamin Vernot; Robert E. Thurman; Sam John; Richard Sandstrom; Audra K. Johnson; Matthew T. Maurano; Richard Humbert; Eric Rynes; Hao Wang; Shinny Vong; Kristen Lee; Daniel Bates; Morgan Diegel; Vaughn Roach; Douglas Dunn; Jun Neri; Anthony Schafer; R. Scott Hansen; Tanya Kutyavin; Erika Giste; Molly Weaver; Theresa K. Canfield; Peter J. Sabo; Miaohua Zhang; Gayathri Balasundaram

Regulatory factor binding to genomic DNA protects the underlying sequence from cleavage by DNase I, leaving nucleotide-resolution footprints. Using genomic DNase I footprinting across 41 diverse cell and tissue types, we detected 45 million transcription factor occupancy events within regulatory regions, representing differential binding to 8.4 million distinct short sequence elements. Here we show that this small genomic sequence compartment, roughly twice the size of the exome, encodes an expansive repertoire of conserved recognition sequences for DNA-binding proteins that nearly doubles the size of the human cis–regulatory lexicon. We find that genetic variants affecting allelic chromatin states are concentrated in footprints, and that these elements are preferentially sheltered from DNA methylation. High-resolution DNase I cleavage patterns mirror nucleotide-level evolutionary conservation and track the crystallographic topography of protein–DNA interfaces, indicating that transcription factor structure has been evolutionarily imprinted on the human genome sequence. We identify a stereotyped 50-base-pair footprint that precisely defines the site of transcript origination within thousands of human promoters. Finally, we describe a large collection of novel regulatory factor recognition motifs that are highly conserved in both sequence and function, and exhibit cell-selective occupancy patterns that closely parallel major regulators of development, differentiation and pluripotency.


Nature Methods | 2009

Global mapping of protein-DNA interactions in vivo by digital genomic footprinting

Jay R. Hesselberth; Xiaoyu Chen; Zhihong Zhang; Peter J. Sabo; Richard Sandstrom; Alex Reynolds; Robert E. Thurman; Shane Neph; Michael S. Kuehn; William Stafford Noble; Stanley Fields; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos

The orchestrated binding of transcriptional activators and repressors to specific DNA sequences in the context of chromatin defines the regulatory program of eukaryotic genomes. We developed a digital approach to assay regulatory protein occupancy on genomic DNA in vivo by dense mapping of individual DNase I cleavages from intact nuclei using massively parallel DNA sequencing. Analysis of >23 million cleavages across the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome revealed thousands of protected regulatory protein footprints, enabling de novo derivation of factor binding motifs and the identification of hundreds of new binding sites for major regulators. We observed striking correspondence between single-nucleotide resolution DNase I cleavage patterns and protein-DNA interactions determined by crystallography. The data also yielded a detailed view of larger chromatin features including positioned nucleosomes flanking factor binding regions. Digital genomic footprinting should be a powerful approach to delineate the cis-regulatory framework of any organism with an available genome sequence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Sequencing newly replicated DNA reveals widespread plasticity in human replication timing

R. Scott Hansen; Sean Thomas; Richard Sandstrom; Theresa K. Canfield; Robert E. Thurman; Molly Weaver; Michael O. Dorschner; Stanley M. Gartler; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos

Faithful transmission of genetic material to daughter cells involves a characteristic temporal order of DNA replication, which may play a significant role in the inheritance of epigenetic states. We developed a genome-scale approach—Repli Seq—to map temporally ordered replicating DNA using massively parallel sequencing and applied it to study regional variation in human DNA replication time across multiple human cell types. The method requires as few as 8,000 cytometry-fractionated cells for a single analysis, and provides high-resolution DNA replication patterns with respect to both cell-cycle time and genomic position. We find that different cell types exhibit characteristic replication signatures that reveal striking plasticity in regional replication time patterns covering at least 50% of the human genome. We also identified autosomal regions with marked biphasic replication timing that include known regions of monoallelic expression as well as many previously uncharacterized domains. Comparison with high-resolution genome-wide profiles of DNaseI sensitivity revealed that DNA replication typically initiates within foci of accessible chromatin comprising clustered DNaseI hypersensitive sites, and that replication time is better correlated with chromatin accessibility than with gene expression. The data collectively provide a unique, genome-wide picture of the epigenetic compartmentalization of the human genome and suggest that cell-lineage specification involves extensive reprogramming of replication timing patterns.


Genome Biology | 2012

An encyclopedia of mouse DNA elements (Mouse ENCODE)

John A. Stamatoyannopoulos; Michael Snyder; Ross C. Hardison; Bing Ren; Thomas R. Gingeras; David M. Gilbert; Mark Groudine; M. A. Bender; Rajinder Kaul; Theresa K. Canfield; Erica Giste; Audra K. Johnson; Mia Zhang; Gayathri Balasundaram; Rachel Byron; Vaughan Roach; Peter J. Sabo; Richard Sandstrom; A Sandra Stehling; Robert E. Thurman; Sherman M. Weissman; Philip Cayting; Manoj Hariharan; Jin Lian; Yong Cheng; Stephen G. Landt; Zhihai Ma; Barbara J. Wold; Job Dekker; Gregory E. Crawford

To complement the human Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project and to enable a broad range of mouse genomics efforts, the Mouse ENCODE Consortium is applying the same experimental pipelines developed for human ENCODE to annotate the mouse genome.


Genome Research | 2012

Widespread plasticity in CTCF occupancy linked to DNA methylation.

Hao Wang; Matthew T. Maurano; Hongzhu Qu; Katherine E. Varley; Jason Gertz; Florencia Pauli; Kristen Lee; Theresa K. Canfield; Molly Weaver; Richard Sandstrom; Robert E. Thurman; Rajinder Kaul; Richard M. Myers; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos

CTCF is a ubiquitously expressed regulator of fundamental genomic processes including transcription, intra- and interchromosomal interactions, and chromatin structure. Because of its critical role in genome function, CTCF binding patterns have long been assumed to be largely invariant across different cellular environments. Here we analyze genome-wide occupancy patterns of CTCF by ChIP-seq in 19 diverse human cell types, including normal primary cells and immortal lines. We observed highly reproducible yet surprisingly plastic genomic binding landscapes, indicative of strong cell-selective regulation of CTCF occupancy. Comparison with massively parallel bisulfite sequencing data indicates that 41% of variable CTCF binding is linked to differential DNA methylation, concentrated at two critical positions within the CTCF recognition sequence. Unexpectedly, CTCF binding patterns were markedly different in normal versus immortal cells, with the latter showing widespread disruption of CTCF binding associated with increased methylation. Strikingly, this disruption is accompanied by up-regulation of CTCF expression, with the result that both normal and immortal cells maintain the same average number of CTCF occupancy sites genome-wide. These results reveal a tight linkage between DNA methylation and the global occupancy patterns of a major sequence-specific regulatory factor.


Cell | 2012

Circuitry and dynamics of human transcription factor regulatory networks

Shane Neph; Andrew B. Stergachis; Alex Reynolds; Richard Sandstrom; Elhanan Borenstein; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos

The combinatorial cross-regulation of hundreds of sequence-specific transcription factors (TFs) defines a regulatory network that underlies cellular identity and function. Here we use genome-wide maps of in vivo DNaseI footprints to assemble an extensive core human regulatory network comprising connections among 475 sequence-specific TFs and to analyze the dynamics of these connections across 41 diverse cell and tissue types. We find that human TF networks are highly cell selective and are driven by cohorts of factors that include regulators with previously unrecognized roles in control of cellular identity. Moreover, we identify many widely expressed factors that impact transcriptional regulatory networks in a cell-selective manner. Strikingly, in spite of their inherent diversity, all cell-type regulatory networks independently converge on a common architecture that closely resembles the topology of living neuronal networks. Together, our results provide an extensive description of the circuitry, dynamics, and organizing principles of the human TF regulatory network.

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Peter J. Sabo

University of Washington

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Alex Reynolds

University of Washington

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Shane Neph

University of Washington

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Eric Haugen

University of Washington

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Jeff Vierstra

University of Washington

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Morgan Diegel

University of Washington

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