1. Functional mapping of androgen receptor enhancer activity
- Author
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Department of Computational Sciences and Engineering; Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Özturan, Doğancan; Altıntaş, Berkay Umut; Gökbayrak, Bengül; Lack, Nathan Alan (ORCID 0000-0001-7399-5844 & YÖK ID 120842), Huang, Flora Chia-Chi; Morova, Tunç; Hu, Eugene; Yu, Lok Pak Ivan; Linder, Simon; Hoogstraat, M.; Stelloo, Suzan; Sar, Funda; Van der Poel, Henk; Saffarzadeh, Mohammadali; Le Bihan, Stephane; McConegy, Brian; Y Feng, Felix; Gleave, E. Martin; Bergman, M. Andries; Collins, Colin; Hach, Faraz; Zwart, Wilbert; Emberly, Eldon, Department of Computational Sciences and Engineering; Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Özturan, Doğancan; Altıntaş, Berkay Umut; Gökbayrak, Bengül; Lack, Nathan Alan (ORCID 0000-0001-7399-5844 & YÖK ID 120842), and Huang, Flora Chia-Chi; Morova, Tunç; Hu, Eugene; Yu, Lok Pak Ivan; Linder, Simon; Hoogstraat, M.; Stelloo, Suzan; Sar, Funda; Van der Poel, Henk; Saffarzadeh, Mohammadali; Le Bihan, Stephane; McConegy, Brian; Y Feng, Felix; Gleave, E. Martin; Bergman, M. Andries; Collins, Colin; Hach, Faraz; Zwart, Wilbert; Emberly, Eldon
- Abstract
Background: androgen receptor (AR) is critical to the initiation, growth, and progression of prostate cancer. Once activated, the AR binds to cis-regulatory enhancer elements on DNA that drive gene expression. Yet, there are 10-100x more binding sites than differentially expressed genes. It is unclear how or if these excess binding sites impact gene transcription. Results: to characterize the regulatory logic of AR-mediated transcription, we generated a locus-specific map of enhancer activity by functionally testing all common clinical AR binding sites with Self-Transcribing Active Regulatory Regions sequencing (STARRseq). Only 7% of AR binding sites displayed androgen-dependent enhancer activity. Instead, the vast majority of AR binding sites were either inactive or constitutively active enhancers. These annotations strongly correlated with enhancer-associated features of both in vitro cell lines and clinical prostate cancer samples. Evaluating the effect of each enhancer class on transcription, we found that AR-regulated enhancers frequently interact with promoters and form central chromosomal loops that are required for transcription. Somatic mutations of these critical AR-regulated enhancers often impact enhancer activity. Conclusions: using a functional map of AR enhancer activity, we demonstrated that AR-regulated enhancers act as a regulatory hub that increases interactions with other AR binding sites and gene promoters.
- Published
- 2021