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Epigenetic patterns in a complete human genome
- Gershman, Ariel;
- Sauria, Michael EG;
- Guitart, Xavi;
- Vollger, Mitchell R;
- Hook, Paul W;
- Hoyt, Savannah J;
- Jain, Miten;
- Shumate, Alaina;
- Razaghi, Roham;
- Koren, Sergey;
- Altemose, Nicolas;
- Caldas, Gina V;
- Logsdon, Glennis A;
- Rhie, Arang;
- Eichler, Evan E;
- Schatz, Michael C;
- O'Neill, Rachel J;
- Phillippy, Adam M;
- Miga, Karen H;
- Timp, Winston
- et al.
Abstract
The completion of a telomere-to-telomere human reference genome, T2T-CHM13, has resolved complex regions of the genome, including repetitive and homologous regions. Here, we present a high-resolution epigenetic study of previously unresolved sequences, representing entire acrocentric chromosome short arms, gene family expansions, and a diverse collection of repeat classes. This resource precisely maps CpG methylation (32.28 million CpGs), DNA accessibility, and short-read datasets (166,058 previously unresolved chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing peaks) to provide evidence of activity across previously unidentified or corrected genes and reveals clinically relevant paralog-specific regulation. Probing CpG methylation across human centromeres from six diverse individuals generated an estimate of variability in kinetochore localization. This analysis provides a framework with which to investigate the most elusive regions of the human genome, granting insights into epigenetic regulation.
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