Back to Search Start Over

LINE elements are a reservoir of regulatory potential in mammalian genomes

Authors :
Osagie G. Izuogu
Duncan T. Odom
Maša Roller
Paul Flicek
Ramachanderan R
Diego Villar
Aisling M. Redmond
Louise Harewood
Fergal J. Martin
Stamper E
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SUMMARYTo investigate the mechanisms driving regulatory evolution across tissues, we experimentally mapped promoters, enhancers, and gene expression in liver, brain, muscle, and testis from ten diverse mammals. The regulatory landscape around genes included both tissue-shared and tissue-specific regulatory regions, where tissue-specific promoters and enhancers evolved most rapidly. Genomic regions switching between promoters and enhancers were more common across species, and less common across tissues within a single species. Long Interspersed Nuclear Elements (LINEs) played recurrent evolutionary roles: LINE L1s were associated with tissue-specific regulatory regions, whereas more ancient LINE L2s were associated with tissue-shared regulatory regions and with those switching between promoter and enhancer signatures across species. Our analyses of the tissue-specificity and evolutionary stability among promoters and enhancers reveal how specific LINE families have helped shape the dynamic mammalian regulome.HIGHLIGHTSTissue-specific regulatory regions evolve faster than tissue-sharedSwitching promoter and enhancer regulatory roles is frequent in evolutionLINE L1s contribute to the evolution of tissue-specific regulatory regionsLINE L2s are associated with broad tissue activity and dynamic regulatory signatures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e084ad5ad0ef08b685763d1e7cfce1a5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.31.126169