Understanding how cis-regulatory function is encoded in DNA sequence using massively parallel reporter assays and designed sequences.

White MA.
Genomics. 2015 Sep;106(3):165-70.
Abstract
Genome-scale methods have identified thousands of candidate cis-regulatory elements (CREs), but methods to directly assay the regulatory function of these elements on a comparably large scale have not been available. The inability to directly test and perturb the regulatory activity of large numbers of DNA sequences has hindered efforts to discover how cis-regulatory function is encoded in genomic sequence. Recently developed massively parallel reporter gene assays combine next generation sequencing with high-throughput oligonucleotide synthesis to offer the capacity to test and mutationally perturb thousands of specifically chosen or designed cis-regulatory sequences in a single experiment. These assays are the basis of recent studies that include large-scale functional validation of genomic CREs, exhaustive mutational analyses of individual regulatory sequences, and tests of large libraries of synthetic CREs. The results demonstrate how massively parallel reporter assays with libraries of designed sequences provide the statistical power required to address previously intractable questions about cis-regulatory function.
References