Person: Depace, Angela
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Publication Dissecting Sources of Quantitative Gene Expression Pattern Divergence Between Drosophila Species
(Nature Publishing Group, 2012) Eckenrode, Kelly B; Lydiard-Martin, Tara; Pearl-Waserman, Sivanne; Wunderlich, Zeba Batool; Bragdon, Meghan; Depace, AngelaThe function of a transcriptional circuit is compared in three closely related species of Drosophila. Using quantitative imaging of gene expression, targeted transgenic reporter fly lines, and a computational framework, the sources of their differing expression outputs are identified.
Publication Cellular resolution models for even skipped regulation in the entire Drosophila embryo
(eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd, 2013) Ilsley, Garth R; Fisher, Jasmin; Apweiler, Rolf; Depace, Angela; Luscombe, Nicholas MTranscriptional control ensures genes are expressed in the right amounts at the correct times and locations. Understanding quantitatively how regulatory systems convert input signals to appropriate outputs remains a challenge. For the first time, we successfully model even skipped (eve) stripes 2 and 3+7 across the entire fly embryo at cellular resolution. A straightforward statistical relationship explains how transcription factor (TF) concentrations define eve’s complex spatial expression, without the need for pairwise interactions or cross-regulatory dynamics. Simulating thousands of TF combinations, we recover known regulators and suggest new candidates. Finally, we accurately predict the intricate effects of perturbations including TF mutations and misexpression. Our approach imposes minimal assumptions about regulatory function; instead we infer underlying mechanisms from models that best fit the data, like the lack of TF-specific thresholds and the positional value of homotypic interactions. Our study provides a general and quantitative method for elucidating the regulation of diverse biological systems. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00522.001
Publication SiteOut: An Online Tool to Design Binding Site-Free DNA Sequences
(Public Library of Science, 2016) Estrada, Javier; Ruiz-Herrero, Teresa; Scholes, Clarissa; Wunderlich, Zeba; Depace, AngelaDNA-binding proteins control many fundamental biological processes such as transcription, recombination and replication. A major goal is to decipher the role that DNA sequence plays in orchestrating the binding and activity of such regulatory proteins. To address this goal, it is useful to rationally design DNA sequences with desired numbers, affinities and arrangements of protein binding sites. However, removing binding sites from DNA is computationally non-trivial since one risks creating new sites in the process of deleting or moving others. Here we present an online binding site removal tool, SiteOut, that enables users to design arbitrary DNA sequences that entirely lack binding sites for factors of interest. SiteOut can also be used to delete sites from a specific sequence, or to introduce site-free spacers between functional sequences without creating new sites at the junctions. In combination with commercial DNA synthesis services, SiteOut provides a powerful and flexible platform for synthetic projects that interrogate regulatory DNA. Here we describe the algorithm and illustrate the ways in which SiteOut can be used; it is publicly available at https://depace.med.harvard.edu/siteout/.