Institute of Experimental
Botany of the CAS
About us
Research groups
Vacancies
Research
Projects
Publications
Technology
Flow cytometry
Reference DNA standards
Resources
Bananas
BarleyEpiBase
Cereals
Contact
Staff
en
cz
Home
Research
Publications
Epigenome and interactome profiling uncovers principles of distal regulation in the barley genome
Epigenome and interactome profiling uncovers principles of distal regulation in the barley genome
Authors
Navratilova, P., Pavlu, S, Zhu, Z., Tulpova, Z., Kopecky, O., Novak, P., Stein, N., Simkova, H.
Year
2026
Journal
Cell Genomics
Volume
6
Pages
101037
DOI
10.1016/j.xgen.2025.101037
Abstract
Regulation of transcription initiation is the ground level of modulating gene expression during plant development. This process relies on interactions between transcription factors and cis-regulatory elements (CREs), which become promising targets for crop bioengineering. To annotate CREs in the barley genome and understand mechanisms of distal regulation, we profiled several epigenetic features across three stages of barley embryo and leaves and performed HiChIP to identify activating and repressive genomic interactions. Using machine learning, we integrated the data into seven chromatin states, predicting ∼77,000 CRE candidates, collectively representing 1.43% of the barley genome. Identified genomic interactions, often spanning multiple genes, linked thousands of predicted CREs with their putative targets and revealed notably frequent promoter-promoter contacts. Using the LEA gene family as an example, we discuss possible roles of these interactions in transcription regulation. On the Vrn3 gene, we demonstrate the potential of our datasets to
predict CREs for other developmental stages.