Identification and classification of cis-regulatory elements in the amphipod crustacean Parhyale hawaiensis

Author:

Sun Dennis A.1ORCID,Bredeson Jessen V.1ORCID,Bruce Heather S.2ORCID,Patel Nipam H.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California 1 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology , , Berkeley , CA 94720, USA

2. 2 Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA

3. University of Chicago 3 Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy , , Chicago, IL 60637, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Emerging research organisms enable the study of biology that cannot be addressed using classical ‘model’ organisms. New data resources can accelerate research in such animals. Here, we present new functional genomic resources for the amphipod crustacean Parhyale hawaiensis, facilitating the exploration of gene regulatory evolution using this emerging research organism. We use Omni-ATAC-seq to identify accessible chromatin genome-wide across a broad time course of Parhyale embryonic development. This time course encompasses many major morphological events, including segmentation, body regionalization, gut morphogenesis and limb development. In addition, we use short- and long-read RNA-seq to generate an improved Parhyale genome annotation, enabling deeper classification of identified regulatory elements. We discover differential accessibility, predict nucleosome positioning, infer transcription factor binding, cluster peaks based on accessibility dynamics, classify biological functions and correlate gene expression with accessibility. Using a Minos transposase reporter system, we demonstrate the potential to identify novel regulatory elements using this approach. This work provides a platform for the identification of novel developmental regulatory elements in Parhyale, and offers a framework for performing such experiments in other emerging research organisms.

Funder

Division of Graduate Education

Division of Integrative Organismal Systems

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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