Uncoupling evolutionary changes in DNA sequence, transcription factor occupancy and enhancer activity

Abstract

Sequence variation within enhancers plays a major role in boThevolution and disease, yet its functional impact on transcription factor (TF) occupancy and enhancer activity remains poorly understood. Here, we assayed the binding of five essential TFs over multiple stages of embryogenesis in two distant Drosophila species (with 1.4 substitutions per neutral site), identifying thousands of orthologous enhancers with conserved or diverged combinatorial occupancy. We used these binding signatures to dissect two properties of developmental enhancers: (1) potential TF cooperativity, using signatures of co-associations and co-divergence in TF occupancy. This revealed conserved combinatorial binding despite sequence divergence, suggesting protein-protein interactions sustain conserved collective occupancy. (2) Enhancer in-vivo activity, revealing orthologous enhancers with conserved activity despite divergence in TF occupancy. Taken together, we identify enhancers with diverged motifs yet conserved occupancy and others with diverged occupancy yet conserved activity, emphasising the need to functionally measure the effect of divergence on enhancer activity. © Khoueiry et al.

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Keywords

Animals, Dna, Drosophila, Enhancer elements, genetic, Evolution, molecular, Protein binding, Transcription factors, Transcription factor, Uncoupling protein, Adult, Animal experiment, Animal model, Animal tissue, Article, Chromatin immunoprecipitation, Confocal microscopy, Controlled study, Developmental biology, Developmental stage, Dna sequence, Drosophila melanogaster, Drosophila virilis, Embryo development, Female, Genetic analysis, Immunohistochemistry, Luciferase assay, Nonhuman, Protein expression, Protein protein interaction, Receptor occupancy, Reproducibility, Animal, Embryology, Enhancer region, Genetics, Metabolism, Molecular evolution

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