Genomic clustered pattern of transcription factor binding reflects phase-separated transcriptional condensates

ORAL

Abstract

Many transcription factors (TFs) have been shown to bind to super-enhancers, forming transcriptional condensates to activate transcription in various cellular systems. However, the genomic and epigenomic determinants of phase-separated transcriptional condensate formation remain poorly understood. Questions regarding which TFs tend to associate with transcriptional condensates and what factors influence their association are largely unanswered. Here we systematically analyzed 528 DNA sequence motifs across the human genome and 6,650 TF binding profiles across different cell types to identify the molecular features contributing to the formation of transcriptional condensates. We found that the genomic distributions of sequence motifs for different TFs exhibit distinct clustering tendencies. Notably, TF motifs with a high genomic clustering tendency are significantly associated with super-enhancers. TF binding profiles showing a high genomic clustering tendency are further enriched at cell-type-specific super-enhancers. TFs with a high binding clustering tendency also possess high liquid-liquid phase separation abilities. Our results indicate that the clustered genomic binding patterns and the phase separation properties of TFs collectively contribute to the formation of transcriptional condensates.

* This work was partially supported by NIH grant R35GM133712.

Presenters

  • Chongzhi Zang

    University of Virginia

Authors

  • Chongzhi Zang

    University of Virginia

  • Zhenjia Wang

    University of Virginia

  • Shengyuan Wang

    University of Virginia