scholarly journals Genomic environments scale the activities of diverse core promoters

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clarice KY Hong ◽  
Barak A Cohen

AbstractOne model for how cells integrate cis-regulatory information is that different classes of core promoters respond specifically to certain genomic environments. We tested this model using a genome-integrated massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) to measure the activity of hundreds of diverse core promoters at four genomic locations and, in a complementary experiment, six core promoters at thousands of genomic locations. While genomic locations had large effects on expression, the relative strengths of core promoters were preserved across locations regardless of promoter class, suggesting that their intrinsic activities are scaled by diverse genomic environments. The extent of scaling depends on the genomic location and the strength of the core promoter, but not on its class. Our results support a modular genome in which genomic environments scale the activities of core promoters.One Sentence SummaryGenomic environments have consistent effects on gene expression that depend on the strength, but not the class of core promoter.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clarice K.Y. Hong ◽  
Barak A. Cohen

A classical model of gene regulation is that enhancers provide specificity whereas core promoters provide a modular site for the assembly of the basal transcriptional machinery. However, examples of core promoter specificity have led to an alternate hypothesis in which specificity is achieved by core promoters with different sequence motifs that respond differently to genomic environments containing different enhancers and chromatin landscapes. To distinguish between these models, we measured the activities of hundreds of diverse core promoters in four different genomic locations and, in a complementary experiment, six different core promoters at thousands of locations across the genome. Although genomic locations had large effects on expression, the intrinsic activities of different classes of promoters were preserved across genomic locations, suggesting that core promoters are modular regulatory elements whose activities are independently scaled up or down by different genomic locations. This scaling of promoter activities is nonlinear and depends on the genomic location and the strength of the core promoter. Our results support the classical model of regulation in which diverse core promoter motifs set the intrinsic strengths of core promoters, which are then amplified or dampened by the activities of their genomic environments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
René Dreos ◽  
Nati Malachi ◽  
Anna Sloutskin ◽  
Philipp Bucher ◽  
Tamar Juven-Gershon

AbstractMetazoan core promoters, which direct the initiation of transcription by RNA polymerase II (Pol II), may contain short sequence motifs termed core promoter elements/motifs (e.g. the TATA box, initiator (Inr) and downstream core promoter element (DPE)), which recruit Pol II via the general transcription machinery. The DPE was discovered and extensively characterized in Drosophila, where it is strictly dependent on both the presence of an Inr and the precise spacing from it. Since the Drosophila DPE is recognized by the human transcription machinery, it is most likely that some human promoters contain a downstream element that is similar, though not necessarily identical, to the Drosophila DPE. However, only a couple of human promoters were shown to contain a functional DPE, and attempts to computationally detect human DPE-containing promoters have mostly been unsuccessful. Using a newly-designed motif discovery strategy based on Expectation-Maximization probabilistic partitioning algorithms, we discovered preferred downstream positions (PDP) in human promoters that resemble the Drosophila DPE. Available chromatin accessibility footprints revealed that Drosophila and human Inr+DPE promoter classes are not only highly structured, but also similar to each other, particularly in the proximal downstream region. Clustering of the corresponding sequence motifs using a neighbor-joining algorithm strongly suggests that canonical Inr+DPE promoters could be common to metazoan species. Using reporter assays we demonstrate the contribution of the identified downstream positions to the function of multiple human promoters. Furthermore, we show that alteration of the spacing between the Inr and PDP by two nucleotides results in reduced promoter activity, suggesting a strict spacing dependency of the newly discovered human PDP on the Inr. Taken together, our strategy identified novel functional downstream positions within human core promoters, supporting the existence of DPE-like motifs in human promoters.Author summaryTranscription of genes by the RNA polymerase II enzyme initiates at a genomic region termed the core promoter. The core promoter is a regulatory region that may contain diverse short DNA sequence motifs/elements that confer specific properties to it. Interestingly, core promoter motifs can be located both upstream and downstream of the transcription start site. Variable compositions of core promoter elements have been identified. The initiator (Inr) motif and the downstream core promoter element (DPE) is a combination of elements that has been identified and extensively characterized in fruit flies. Although a few Inr+DPE - containing human promoters have been identified, the presence of transcriptionally important downstream core promoter positions within human promoters has been a matter of controversy in the literature. Here, using a newly-designed motif discovery strategy, we discovered preferred downstream positions in human promoters that resemble fruit fly DPE. Clustering of the corresponding sequence motifs in eight additional species indicated that such promoters could be common to multicellular non-plant organisms. Importantly, functional characterization of the newly discovered preferred downstream positions supports the existence of Inr+DPE-containing promoters in human genes.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Fang ◽  
Yi Wen ◽  
Xiangyun Wei

AbstractTissue-specific or cell type-specific transcription of protein-coding genes is controlled by both trans-regulatory elements (TREs) and cis-regulatory elements (CREs). However, it is challenging to identify TREs and CREs, which are unknown for most genes. Here, we describe a protocol for identifying two types of transcription-activating CREs—core promoters and enhancers—of zebrafish photoreceptor type-specific genes. This protocol is composed of three phases: bioinformatic prediction, experimental validation, and characterization of the CREs. To better illustrate the principles and logic of this protocol, we exemplify it with the discovery of the core promoter and enhancer of the mpp5b apical polarity gene (also known as ponli), whose red, green, and blue (RGB) cone-specific transcription requires its enhancer, a member of the rainbow enhancer family. While exemplified with an RGB cone-specific gene, this protocol is general and can be used to identify the core promoters and enhancers of other protein-coding genes.


Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan R Tucker ◽  
Jiangchuan Ye ◽  
Honghuang Lin ◽  
Michael A McLellan ◽  
Emelia J Benjamin ◽  
...  

Introduction: Genome-wide association studies have identified 14 independent loci for atrial fibrillation (AF). The 4q25 locus upstream of the left-right asymmetry gene PITX2 is, by far, the strongest association signal for AF. However, as with most GWAS loci, the functional variants are noncoding, presumed to be regulatory, and remain unknown. We therefore sought to rapidly identify the functional variants at an AF locus by combining high throughput sequencing and massively parallel reporter assays. Methods and Results: We sequenced a ~750kb region encompassing the PITX2 locus in 462 individuals with early-onset AF from the MGH AF Study and 464 referents from the Framingham Heart Study. The SNP most significantly associated with AF in our sequenced sample was rs2129983, which is 140kb from PITX2 (OR=2.43, P =8.9X10 -16 ). rs2129983 is approximately 1.7kb from the most significantly associated SNP in a prior AF GWAS, rs6817105 (r 2 =0.52). From the targeted sequencing analysis, we identified 262 SNVs with a MAF >0.5% within a genomic region bounded by SNPs with an r2 greater than 0.4 with the top variant. To identify functional variants, we then utilized a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) in order to measure enhancer activity at each SNP across the entire AF locus. In both HL-1 and C2C12 myoblasts, MPRA identified many distinct SNP regions with differential enhancer activity. Using AF-association status as a standard, we were able to identify a series of variants that have both differential activity in either cell line tested and also a high level of association (rs17042076, rs4469143). Mechanistically, these functional SNPs are predicted to alter transcription factor binding. Conclusions: We have comprehensively identified the AF-associated variation at 4q25 and determined which of these variants are functional through differential enhancer activity. Here, in addition to identifying the causative variation for AF at 4q25, we provide a generalizable pathway for translating this work to other loci, a method that could expedite the identification of causative genetic variants at other disease loci.


2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 1610-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Maria Imoberdorf ◽  
Irini Topalidou ◽  
Michel Strubin

ABSTRACT Transcriptional activators often require histone acetyltransferases (HATs) for full activity. The common explanation is that activators directly recruit HATs to gene promoters to locally hyperacetylate histones and thereby facilitate transcription complex formation. However, in addition to being targeted to specific loci, HATs such as Gcn5 also modify histones genome-wide. Here we provide evidence for a role of this global HAT activity in regulated transcription. We show that activation by direct recruitment of the transcriptional machinery neither recruits Gcn5 nor induces changes in histone acetylation yet can strongly depend on Gcn5 at promoters showing a high basal state of Gcn5-mediated histone acetylation. We also show that Gcn5 dependency varies among core promoters and is influenced by the strength of interaction used to recruit the machinery and by the affinity of the latter for the core promoter. These data support a role for global Gcn5 HAT activity in modulating transcription independently of its known coactivator function.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew R. Norman ◽  
Ann H. Ryu ◽  
Kirsty Jamieson ◽  
Sean Thomas ◽  
Yin Shen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTHuman accelerated regions (HARs) are sequences that have evolved at an accelerated rate in the human lineage. Some HARs are developmental enhancers. We used a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) to identify HARs with enhancer activity in a mammalian testis cell line. A subset of HARs exhibited differential activity between the human and chimpanzee orthologs, representing candidates for underlying unique human male reproductive biology. We further characterized one of these candidate testis enhancers, 2xHAR.238. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated deletion in a testis cell line and mice revealed that 2xHAR.238 enhances expression of Gli2, encoding a Hedgehog pathway effector, in testis Leydig cells. 4C-seq revealed that 2xHAR.238 contacts the Gli2 promoter, consistent with enhancer function. In adult male mice, deletion of 2xHAR.238 disrupted mouse male-typical behavior and male interest in female odor. Combined, our work identifies a HAR that promotes the expression of Gli2 in Leydig cells and may have contributed to the evolution of human male reproductive biology.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chinmay J Shukla ◽  
Alexandra L McCorkindale ◽  
Chiara Gerhardinger ◽  
Keegan D Korthauer ◽  
Moran N Cabili ◽  
...  

SummaryOne of the biggest surprises since the sequencing of the human genome has been the discovery of thousands of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs)1–6. Although lncRNAs and mRNAs are similar in many ways, they differ with lncRNAs being more nuclear-enriched and in several cases exclusively nuclear7,8. Yet, the RNA-based sequences that determine nuclear localization remain poorly understood9–11. Towards the goal of systematically dissecting the lncRNA sequences that impart nuclear localization, we developed a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA). Unlike previous MPRAs12–15 that determine motifs important for transcriptional regulation, we have modified this approach to identify sequences sufficient for RNA nuclear enrichment for 38 human lncRNAs. Using this approach, we identified 109 unique, conserved nuclear enrichment regions, originating from 29 distinct lncRNAs. We also discovered two shorter motifs within our nuclear enrichment regions. We further validated the sufficiency of several regions to impart nuclear localization by single molecule RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (smRNA-FISH). Taken together, these results provide a first systematic insight into the sequence elements responsible for the nuclear enrichment of lncRNA molecules.


2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 800-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Kheradpour ◽  
J. Ernst ◽  
A. Melnikov ◽  
P. Rogov ◽  
L. Wang ◽  
...  

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