Unique and assay specific features of NOMe-, ATAC- and DNase I-seq data

Author:

Nordström Karl J V1,Schmidt Florian23ORCID,Gasparoni Nina1,Salhab Abdulrahman1,Gasparoni Gilles1,Kattler Kathrin1,Müller Fabian2,Ebert Peter2,Costa Ivan G4ORCID,Pfeifer Nico2,Lengauer Thomas2,Schulz Marcel H23,Walter Jörn1ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Saarland University, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

2. Department of Computational Biology and Applied Algorithmics, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

3. Excellence Cluster on Multimodal Computing and Interaction, Saarland University, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

4. Institute for Computational Genomics, Joint Research Center for Computational Biomedicine, RWTH Aachen University Medical School, 52074 Aachen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Chromatin accessibility maps are important for the functional interpretation of the genome. Here, we systematically analysed assay specific differences between DNase I-seq, ATAC-seq and NOMe-seq in a side by side experimental and bioinformatic setup. We observe that most prominent nucleosome depleted regions (NDRs, e.g. in promoters) are roboustly called by all three or at least two assays. However, we also find a high proportion of assay specific NDRs that are often ‘called’ by only one of the assays. We show evidence that these assay specific NDRs are indeed genuine open chromatin sites and contribute important information for accurate gene expression prediction. While technically ATAC-seq and DNase I-seq provide a superb high NDR calling rate for relatively low sequencing costs in comparison to NOMe-seq, NOMe-seq singles out for its genome-wide coverage allowing to not only detect NDRs but also endogenous DNA methylation and as we show here genome wide segmentation into heterochromatic B domains and local phasing of nucleosomes outside of NDRs. In summary, our comparisons strongly suggest to consider assay specific differences for the experimental design and for generalized and comparative functional interpretations.

Funder

Federal Ministry of Education and Research

BMBF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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