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Densely Interconnected Transcriptional Circuits Control Cell States in Human Hematopoiesis

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2011

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Elsevier BV
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Novershtern, Noa, Aravind Subramanian, Lee N. Lawton, Raymond H. Mak, W. Nicholas Haining, Marie E. McConkey, Naomi Habib, et al. 2011. “Densely Interconnected Transcriptional Circuits Control Cell States in Human Hematopoiesis.” Cell 144 (2) (January): 296–309. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.01.004.

Abstract

While many individual transcription factors are known to regulate hematopoietic differentiation, major aspects of the global architecture of hematopoiesis remain unknown. Here, we profiled gene expression in 38 distinct purified populations of human hematopoietic cells and used probabilistic models of gene expression and analysis of cis-elements in gene promoters to decipher the general organization of their regulatory circuitry. We identified modules of highly co-expressed genes, some of which are restricted to a single lineage, but most are expressed at variable levels across multiple lineages. We found densely interconnected cis-regulatory circuits and a large number of transcription factors that are differentially expressed across hematopoietic states. These findings suggest a more complex regulatory system for hematopoiesis than previously assumed.

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