Publication

Dynamic interplay between enhancer-promoter topology and gene activity.

current
   January 13th, 2021 at 11:41pm

Overview


Abstract

A long-standing question in gene regulation is how remote enhancers communicate with their target promoters, and specifically how chromatin topology dynamically relates to gene activation. Here, we combine genome editing and multi-color live imaging to simultaneously visualize physical enhancer-promoter interaction and transcription at the single-cell level in Drosophila embryos. By examining transcriptional activation of a reporter by the endogenous even-skipped enhancers, which are located 150 kb away, we identify three distinct topological conformation states and measure their transition kinetics. We show that sustained proximity of the enhancer to its target is required for activation. Transcription in turn affects the three-dimensional topology as it enhances the temporal stability of the proximal conformation and is associated with further spatial compaction. Furthermore, the facilitated long-range activation results in transcriptional competition at the locus, causing corresponding developmental defects. Our approach offers quantitative insight into the spatial and temporal determinants of long-range gene regulation and their implications for cellular fates.

Authors

Chen H  •  Levo M  •  Barinov L  •  Fujioka M  •  Jaynes JB  •  Gregor T

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30038397


Journal

Nature genetics

PMID:30038397

Published

September 2018