Schema for TF ChIP - Transcription Factor ChIP-seq Peaks (340 factors in 129 cell types) from ENCODE 3
  Database: hg38    Primary Table: encTfChipPkENCFF502JJJ    Row Count: 8,503   Data last updated: 2019-04-01
Format description: BED6+4 Peaks of signal enrichment based on pooled, normalized (interpreted) data.
On download server: MariaDB table dump directory
fieldexampleSQL type info description
bin 594smallint(5) unsigned range Indexing field to speed chromosome range queries.
chrom chr1varchar(255) values Reference sequence chromosome or scaffold
chromStart 1231946int(10) unsigned range Start position in chromosome
chromEnd 1232286int(10) unsigned range End position in chromosome
name .varchar(255) values Name given to a region (preferably unique). Use . if no name is assigned
score 191int(10) unsigned range Indicates how dark the peak will be displayed in the browser (0-1000)
strand .char(1) values + or - or . for unknown
signalValue 24.8686float range Measurement of average enrichment for the region
pValue -1float range Statistical significance of signal value (-log10). Set to -1 if not used.
qValue 0.75034float range Statistical significance with multiple-test correction applied (FDR -log10). Set to -1 if not used.
peak 170int(11) range Point-source called for this peak; 0-based offset from chromStart. Set to -1 if no point-source called.

Sample Rows
 
binchromchromStartchromEndnamescorestrandsignalValuepValueqValuepeak
594chr112319461232286.191.24.8686-10.75034170
595chr113992461399586.200.25.9996-10.74309170
596chr115118591512199.197.25.6601-10.74588170
597chr116152361615414.1000.182.311-12.4424895
599chr118586561858996.253.32.8949-10.68196170
600chr120501412050272.928.120.437-11.5566337
600chr120734752073815.353.45.8967-10.67653170
601chr121893682189708.192.24.9789-10.74818170
601chr121993472199687.226.29.3342-10.71232170
601chr122148792215219.490.63.7156-10.79541170

Note: all start coordinates in our database are 0-based, not 1-based. See explanation here.

TF ChIP (encTfChipPk) Track Description
 

Description

This track represents a comprehensive set of human transcription factor binding sites based on ChIP-seq experiments generated by production groups in the ENCODE Consortium between February 2011 and November 2018.

Transcription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to DNA and interact with RNA polymerases to regulate gene expression. Some TFs contain a DNA binding domain and can bind directly to specific short DNA sequences ('motifs'); others bind to DNA indirectly through interactions with TFs containing a DNA binding domain. High-throughput antibody capture and sequencing methods (e.g. chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing, or 'ChIP-seq') can be used to identify regions of TF binding genome-wide. These regions are commonly called ChIP-seq peaks.

The related Transcription Factor ChIP-seq Clusters tracks (hg19, hg38) provide summary views of this data.

Display and File Conventions and Configuration

The display for this track shows site location with the point-source of the peak marked with a colored vertical bar and the level of enrichment at the site indicated by the darkness of the item. The subtracks are colored by UCSC ENCODE 2 cell type color conventions on the hg19 assembly, and by similarity of cell types in DNaseI hypersensitivity assays (as in the DNase Signal) track in the hg38 assembly.

The display can be filtered to higher valued items, using the Score range: configuration item. The score values were computed at UCSC based on signal values assigned by the ENCODE pipeline. The input signal values were multiplied by a normalization factor calculated as the ratio of the maximum score value (1000) to the signal value at 1 standard deviation from the mean, with values exceeding 1000 capped at 1000. This has the effect of distributing scores up to mean + 1std across the score range, but assigning all above to the maximum score.

Methods

The ChIP-seq peaks in this track were generated by the the ENCODE Transcription Factor ChIP-seq Processing Pipeline. Methods documentation and full metadata for each track can be found at the ENCODE project portal, using The ENCODE file accession (ENCFF*) listed in the track label.

Credits

Thanks to the ENCODE Consortium, the ENCODE ChIP-seq production laboratories, and the ENCODE Data Coordination Center for generating and processing the datasets used here. Special thanks to Henry Pratt, Jill Moore, Michael Purcaro, and Zhiping Weng, PI, at the ENCODE Data Analysis Center (ZLab at UMass Medical Center) for providing the peak datasets, metadata, and guidance developing this track. Please check the ZLab ENCODE Public Hubs for the most updated data.

References

ENCODE Project Consortium. A user's guide to the encyclopedia of DNA elements (ENCODE). PLoS Biol. 2011 Apr;9(4):e1001046. PMID: 21526222; PMCID: PMC3079585

ENCODE Project Consortium. An integrated encyclopedia of DNA elements in the human genome. Nature. 2012 Sep 6;489(7414):57-74. PMID: 22955616; PMCID: PMC3439153

Sloan CA, Chan ET, Davidson JM, Malladi VS, Strattan JS, Hitz BC, Gabdank I, Narayanan AK, Ho M, Lee BT et al. ENCODE data at the ENCODE portal. Nucleic Acids Res. 2016 Jan 4;44(D1):D726-32. PMID: 26527727; PMC: PMC4702836

Gerstein MB, Kundaje A, Hariharan M, Landt SG, Yan KK, Cheng C, Mu XJ, Khurana E, Rozowsky J, Alexander R et al. Architecture of the human regulatory network derived from ENCODE data. Nature. 2012 Sep 6;489(7414):91-100. PMID: 22955619

Wang J, Zhuang J, Iyer S, Lin X, Whitfield TW, Greven MC, Pierce BG, Dong X, Kundaje A, Cheng Y et al. Sequence features and chromatin structure around the genomic regions bound by 119 human transcription factors. Genome Res. 2012 Sep;22(9):1798-812. PMID: 22955990; PMC: PMC3431495

Wang J, Zhuang J, Iyer S, Lin XY, Greven MC, Kim BH, Moore J, Pierce BG, Dong X, Virgil D et al. Factorbook.org: a Wiki-based database for transcription factor-binding data generated by the ENCODE consortium. Nucleic Acids Res. 2013 Jan;41(Database issue):D171-6. PMID: 23203885; PMC: PMC3531197

Data Use Policy

Users may freely download, analyze and publish results based on any ENCODE data without restrictions. Researchers using unpublished ENCODE data are encouraged to contact the data producers to discuss possible coordinated publications; however, this is optional.

Users of ENCODE datasets are requested to cite the ENCODE Consortium and ENCODE production laboratory(s) that generated the datasets used, as described in Citing ENCODE.