Publication | Open Access
HiTAD: detecting the structural and functional hierarchies of topologically associating domains from chromatin interactions
101
Citations
43
References
2017
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyEpigeneticsFunctional HierarchiesBiological NetworkBiological Network VisualizationChromatin InteractionsGenome StructureTopological RepresentationNuclear OrganizationChromosomal RearrangementDomain SensitivityFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsStructural BiologyChromatin FunctionChromatinHierarchical Tad ChangesChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesComputational BiologyTad DefinitionSystems BiologyMedicineGenome Editing
A current question in the high-order organization of chromatin is whether topologically associating domains (TADs) are distinct from other hierarchical chromatin domains. However, due to the unclear TAD definition in tradition, the structural and functional uniqueness of TAD is not well studied. In this work, we refined TAD definition by further constraining TADs to the optimal separation on global intra-chromosomal interactions. Inspired by this constraint, we developed a novel method, called HiTAD, to detect hierarchical TADs from Hi-C chromatin interactions. HiTAD performs well in domain sensitivity, replicate reproducibility and inter cell-type conservation. With a novel domain-based alignment proposed by us, we defined several types of hierarchical TAD changes which were not systematically studied previously, and subsequently used them to reveal that TADs and sub-TADs differed statistically in correlating chromosomal compartment, replication timing and gene transcription. Finally, our work also has the implication that the refinement of TAD definition could be achieved by only utilizing chromatin interactions, at least in part. HiTAD is freely available online.
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