Геномная изменчивость в регуляторных районах генов, ассоциированная с заболеваниями человека: механизмы влияния на транскрипцию генов и полногеномные информационные ресурсы, обеспечивающие исследование этих механизмов

Translated title of the contribution: Disease-associated genetic variants in the regulatory regions of human genes: Mechanisms of action on transcription and genomic resources for dissecting these mechanisms

E. V. Ignatieva, E. A. Matrosova

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Whole genome and whole exome sequencing technologies play a very important role in the studies of the genetic aspects of the pathogenesis of various diseases. The ample use of genome-wide and exome-wide association study methodology (GWAS and EWAS) made it possible to identify a large number of genetic variants associated with diseases. This information is accumulated in the databases like GWAS central, GWAS catalog, OMIM, ClinVar, etc. Most of the variants identified by the GWAS technique are located in the noncoding regions of the human genome. According to the ENCODE project, the fraction of regions in the human genome potentially involved in transcriptional control is many times greater than the fraction of coding regions. Thus, genetic variation in noncoding regions of the genome can increase the susceptibility to diseases by disrupting various regulatory elements (promoters, enhancers, silencers, insulator regions, etc.). However, identification of the mechanisms of influence of pathogenic genetic variants on the diseases risk is difficult due to a wide variety of regulatory elements. The present review focuses on the molecular genetic mechanisms by which pathogenic genetic variants affect gene expression. At the same time, attention is concentrated on the transcriptional level of regulation as an initial step in the expression of any gene. A triggering event mediating the effect of a pathogenic genetic variant on the level of gene expression can be, for example, a change in the functional activity of transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) or DNA methylation change, which, in turn, affects the functional activity of promoters or enhancers. Dissecting the regulatory roles of polymorphic loci have been impossible without close integration of modern experimental approaches with computer analysis of a growing wealth of genetic and biological data obtained using omics technologies. The review provides a brief description of a number of the most well-known public genomic information resources containing data obtained using omics technologies, including (1) resources that accumulate data on the chromatin states and the regions of transcription factor binding derived from ChIP-seq experiments; (2) resources containing data on genomic loci, for which allele-specific transcription factor binding was revealed based on ChIP-seq technology; (3) resources containing in silico predicted data on the potential impact of genetic variants on the transcription factor binding sites.

Translated title of the contributionDisease-associated genetic variants in the regulatory regions of human genes: Mechanisms of action on transcription and genomic resources for dissecting these mechanisms
Original languageRussian
Article number2
Pages (from-to)18-29
Number of pages12
JournalVavilovskii Zhurnal Genetiki i Selektsii
Volume25
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2021

Keywords

  • Genetic variability
  • Genomic databases
  • Pathogenic genetic variants
  • Transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs)
  • Transcription regulation
  • Transcription regulatory regions

OECD FOS+WOS

  • 4.01.AH AGRICULTURE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
  • 1.06.KM GENETICS & HEREDITY
  • 3 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES
  • 1.06 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

State classification of scientific and technological information

  • 34 BIOLOGY

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Disease-associated genetic variants in the regulatory regions of human genes: Mechanisms of action on transcription and genomic resources for dissecting these mechanisms'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this