Abstract
Cis-regulatory elements (CREs), such as promoters and en-hancers, are DNA sequences that regulate the expression of genes. The activity of a CRE is influenced by the order, composition and spacing of sequence motifs that bind to proteins called transcription factors (TFs). Synthetic CREs with specific properties are needed for biomanufacturing as well as for many therapeutic applications including cell and gene therapy.
Here, we present regLM, a framework to design synthetic CREs with desired properties, such as high, low or cell type-specific activity, using autoregressive language models in conjunction with supervised sequence-to-function models. We used our framework to design synthetic yeast promoters and cell type-specific human enhancers. We demonstrate that the synthetic CREs generated by our approach are not only predicted to have the desired functionality but also contain biological features similar to experimentally validated CREs. regLM thus facilitates the design of realistic regulatory DNA elements while providing insights into the cis-regulatory code.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
{lal.avantika{at}gene.com,eraslan.gokcen{at}gene.com}
Updates to Fig. 2