df99c448f8e0386bb718da0044b22752fc145713 gperez2 Thu Jun 4 00:15:12 2026 -0700 Updating ENCODE4 Regulation labels and description pages for hg38 and mm10. refs #34923 - Capitalized 363 hg38 Layered organ shortLabels and shortened the over-length TF rPeaks and Indiv. composite longLabels; updated the mm10 TF ChIP container longLabel. - TF rPeaks: added the missing SHOX2 to filterValues.factor (now 912), and updated "911 factors"/"2,502 experiments" to "912"/"2,509". - Supertrack pages: changed Layered bullets from "highlights" to "displays", reworded the histone and CTCF bullets, updated the default-organ note, and updated stale hg38 organ counts to 38/41/26/38/36. - Updated the TF ChIP facet name "Tf" -> "TF" on both description pages. - Makedoc: updated hg38 "911-factor" -> "912-factor" and mm10 RNA-seq Unstranded "26" -> "8". diff --git src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/mouse/mm10/encode4Reg.html src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/mouse/mm10/encode4Reg.html index 99b1d620402..0f8f5105057 100644 --- src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/mouse/mm10/encode4Reg.html +++ src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/mouse/mm10/encode4Reg.html @@ -1,140 +1,139 @@

Description

This collection of tracks offers an integrated view of genomic annotations and experimental data from all phases of the ENCODE Project, with a focus on transcriptional regulation. It includes averaged and representative signals from assays that measure chromatin accessibility (DNase-seq and ATAC-seq), transcription factor (TF) binding (ChIP-seq for individual TFs), histone modifications (ChIP-seq for H3K4me3 and H3K27ac), CTCF binding, and transcription (RNA-seq).

Tracks labeled (Layered) show organ-averaged signals as a transparent overlay of multiple organs within a single track. Tracks labeled (Indiv.) show signals from individual experiments in specific biosamples.

-These tracks complement one another and collectively provide a powerful resource for +These tracks complement one another and collectively provide a resource for interpreting regulatory DNA. Histone marks are broadly informative but have limited resolution (~200 bp) and relatively low functional specificity. DNase-seq assays offer higher resolution and scalability across many cell types, and they reliably indicate regulatory potential, though they lack detailed functional context. ATAC-seq serves a similar role to DNase-seq, with comparable resolution and limitations. Transcription factor ChIP-seq has high positional resolution and, due to the specificity of TFs, often provides more direct functional insight. However, because each TF must be assayed individually, the data are limited in biosample coverage. Despite the individual strengths and limitations of these assays, their independence from one another increases confidence when multiple assays suggest a regulatory function for the same genomic region.

For additional information, click on the hyperlinks for the individual tracks above. Additional histone marks and transcription data are available in other ENCODE tracks. This integrative supertrack presents a curated selection of the most informative and broadly relevant datasets. Further functional annotations of individual regulatory elements are available at SCREEN.

For annotations of individual regulatory elements, see the related ENCODE cCREs track.

Display Conventions

By default, the DNase (Layered), ATAC (Layered), H3K4me3 (Layered), H3K27ac (Layered), CTCF (Layered), and Transcription (Layered) tracks use a transparent overlay to visualize signals from multiple organs or tissues within a single track. For each organ or tissue, signal values from all associated experiments are averaged. Each organ or tissue is assigned a distinct color, selected to be light and saturated to maintain clarity when overlaid. Initially, each layered -track displays an overlay of five representative organs: blood, brain, kidney, liver, and -muscle. Clicking on the track opens a details page where you can view and select organs or +track displays an overlay of representative organs: blood, brain, kidney, liver, and +muscle (the H3K27ac and ATAC tracks have no muscle data). Clicking on the track opens a details page where you can view and select organs or tissues.

The TF ChIP-seq (Indiv.), DNase/ATAC/Histone/CTCF (Indiv.), and RNA-seq (Indiv.) tracks are hidden by default. Clicking on any of these tracks opens a details page where you can select specific biosample-level experiments to display.

Data Access

The ENCODE 4 Regulation data on the UCSC Genome Browser can be explored interactively with the Table Browser or the Data Integrator. For automated download and analysis, the track data files can be downloaded from our download server or queried using the REST API. Individual regions or the whole genome annotation can be accessed as text using our utilities bigWigToWig and bigBedToBed. Instructions for downloading source code and binaries can be found here. The original data files are also available from the ENCODE portal.

Credits

Data were generated by the ENCODE Consortium. The data were further processed for visualization through a collaborative effort between the Weng lab and the Moore lab at UMass Chan Medical School (funded by NIH grant HG012343). Integration and visualization were developed by Drs. Mingshi Gao, Jill Moore, and Zhiping Weng at UMass Chan Medical School, who were part of the ENCODE Data Analysis Center.

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.

References

ENCODE Project Consortium, Moore JE, Purcaro MJ, Pratt HE, Epstein CB, Shoresh N, Adrian J, Kawli T, Davis CA, Dobin A et al. Expanded encyclopaedias of DNA elements in the human and mouse genomes. Nature. 2020 Jul;583(7818):699-710. PMID: 32728249; PMC: PMC7410828

Moore JE, Pratt HE, Fan K, Phalke N, Fisher J, Elhajjajy SI, Andrews G, Gao M, Shedd N, Fu Y et al. An Expanded Registry of Candidate cis-Regulatory Elements for Studying Transcriptional Regulation. Nature. 2026 January 7. PMID: 39763870; PMC: PMC11703161