Multipartite super-enhancers function in an orientation-dependent manner

Author:

Kassouf Mira T.,Francis Helena S.,Gosden Matthew,Suciu Maria C.,Downes Damien J.,Harrold Caroline,Larke Martin,Oudelaar Marieke,Cornell Lucy,Blayney Joseph,Telenius Jelena,Xella Barbara,Shen Yuki,Sousos Nikolaos,Sharpe Jacqueline A.,Sloane-Stanley Jacqueline,Smith Andrew,Babbs Christian,Hughes Jim R.,Higgs Douglas R.

Abstract

AbstractTranscriptional enhancers regulate gene expression in a developmental-stage and cell-specific manner. They were originally defined as individual regulatory elements that activate expression regardless of distance and orientation to their cognate genes. Genome-wide studies have shown that the mammalian enhancer landscape is much more complex, with different classes of individual enhancers and clusters of enhancer-like elements combining in additive, synergistic and redundant manners, possibly acting as single, integrated regulatory elements. These so-called super-enhancers are largely defined as clusters of enhancer-like elements which recruit particularly high levels of Mediator and often drive high levels of expression of key lineage-specific genes. Here, we analysed 78 erythroid-specific super-enhancers and showed that, as units, they preferentially interact in a directional manner, to drive expression of their cognate genes. Using the well characterised α-globin super-enhancer, we show that inverting this entire structure severely downregulates α-globin expression and activates flanking genes 5’ of the super-enhancer. Our detailed genetic dissection of the α-globin locus clearly attributes the cluster’s functional directionality to its sequence orientation, demonstrating that, unlike regular enhancers, super-enhancers act in an orientation-dependent manner. Together, these findings identify a novel emergent property of super-enhancers and revise current models by which enhancers are thought to contact and activate their cognate genes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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