학술논문

Quantitative Measurement and Thermodynamic Modeling of Fused Enhancers Support a Two-Tiered Mechanism for Interpreting Regulatory DNA
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports. 21(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Generic health relevance
Animals
Animals
Genetically Modified
Binding Sites
Blastoderm
DNA
Drosophila Proteins
Drosophila melanogaster
Enhancer Elements
Genetic
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Homeodomain Proteins
Lac Operon
Models
Genetic
Protein Binding
Recombinant Fusion Proteins
Repressor Proteins
Thermodynamics
Transcription Factors
bag of sites model
enhancer
enhancer-level model
fused enhancer
locus-level model
quenching model
thermodynamic model
two-tier model
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Physiology
Biological sciences
Language
Abstract
Computational models of enhancer function generally assume that transcription factors (TFs) exert their regulatory effects independently, modeling an enhancer as a "bag of sites." These models fail on endogenous loci that harbor multiple enhancers, and a "two-tier" model appears better suited: in each enhancer TFs work independently, and the total expression is a weighted sum of their expression readouts. Here, we test these two opposing views on how cis-regulatory information is integrated. We fused two Drosophila blastoderm enhancers, measured their readouts, and applied the above two models to these data. The two-tier mechanism better fits these readouts, suggesting that these fused enhancers comprise multiple independent modules, despite having sequence characteristics typical of single enhancers. We show that short-range TF-TF interactions are not sufficient to designate such modules, suggesting unknown underlying mechanisms. Our results underscore that mechanisms of how modules are defined and how their outputs are combined remain to be elucidated.