An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.

Several distinct activities and functions have been described for chromatin insulators, which separate genes along chromosomes into functional units. Here, we describe a novel mechanism of functional separation whereby an insulator prevents gene repression. When the homie insulator is deleted from t...

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Main Authors: Miki Fujioka, Anastasiya Nezdyur, James B Jaynes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-04-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009536
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spelling doaj-5b2f01eff46d4912ba4bc20575b339eb2021-05-21T04:32:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042021-04-01174e100953610.1371/journal.pgen.1009536An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.Miki FujiokaAnastasiya NezdyurJames B JaynesSeveral distinct activities and functions have been described for chromatin insulators, which separate genes along chromosomes into functional units. Here, we describe a novel mechanism of functional separation whereby an insulator prevents gene repression. When the homie insulator is deleted from the end of a Drosophila even skipped (eve) locus, a flanking P-element promoter is activated in a partial eve pattern, causing expression driven by enhancers in the 3' region to be repressed. The mechanism involves transcriptional read-through from the flanking promoter. This conclusion is based on the following. Read-through driven by a heterologous enhancer is sufficient to repress, even when homie is in place. Furthermore, when the flanking promoter is turned around, repression is minimal. Transcriptional read-through that does not produce anti-sense RNA can still repress expression, ruling out RNAi as the mechanism in this case. Thus, transcriptional interference, caused by enhancer capture and read-through when the insulator is removed, represses eve promoter-driven expression. We also show that enhancer-promoter specificity and processivity of transcription can have decisive effects on the consequences of insulator removal. First, a core heat shock 70 promoter that is not activated well by eve enhancers did not cause read-through sufficient to repress the eve promoter. Second, these transcripts are less processive than those initiated at the P-promoter, measured by how far they extend through the eve locus, and so are less disruptive. These results highlight the importance of considering transcriptional read-through when assessing the effects of insulators on gene expression.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009536
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miki Fujioka
Anastasiya Nezdyur
James B Jaynes
spellingShingle Miki Fujioka
Anastasiya Nezdyur
James B Jaynes
An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Miki Fujioka
Anastasiya Nezdyur
James B Jaynes
author_sort Miki Fujioka
title An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
title_short An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
title_full An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
title_fullStr An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
title_full_unstemmed An insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
title_sort insulator blocks access to enhancers by an illegitimate promoter, preventing repression by transcriptional interference.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Several distinct activities and functions have been described for chromatin insulators, which separate genes along chromosomes into functional units. Here, we describe a novel mechanism of functional separation whereby an insulator prevents gene repression. When the homie insulator is deleted from the end of a Drosophila even skipped (eve) locus, a flanking P-element promoter is activated in a partial eve pattern, causing expression driven by enhancers in the 3' region to be repressed. The mechanism involves transcriptional read-through from the flanking promoter. This conclusion is based on the following. Read-through driven by a heterologous enhancer is sufficient to repress, even when homie is in place. Furthermore, when the flanking promoter is turned around, repression is minimal. Transcriptional read-through that does not produce anti-sense RNA can still repress expression, ruling out RNAi as the mechanism in this case. Thus, transcriptional interference, caused by enhancer capture and read-through when the insulator is removed, represses eve promoter-driven expression. We also show that enhancer-promoter specificity and processivity of transcription can have decisive effects on the consequences of insulator removal. First, a core heat shock 70 promoter that is not activated well by eve enhancers did not cause read-through sufficient to repress the eve promoter. Second, these transcripts are less processive than those initiated at the P-promoter, measured by how far they extend through the eve locus, and so are less disruptive. These results highlight the importance of considering transcriptional read-through when assessing the effects of insulators on gene expression.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009536
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