Cell Reports (Jun 2016)

Active and Inactive Enhancers Cooperate to Exert Localized and Long-Range Control of Gene Regulation

  • Charlotte Proudhon,
  • Valentina Snetkova,
  • Ramya Raviram,
  • Camille Lobry,
  • Sana Badri,
  • Tingting Jiang,
  • Bingtao Hao,
  • Thomas Trimarchi,
  • Yuval Kluger,
  • Iannis Aifantis,
  • Richard Bonneau,
  • Jane A. Skok

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.04.087
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
pp. 2159 – 2169

Abstract

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V(D)J recombination relies on the presence of proximal enhancers that activate the antigen receptor (AgR) loci in a lineage- and stage-specific manner. Unexpectedly, we find that both active and inactive AgR enhancers cooperate to disseminate their effects in a localized and long-range manner. Here, we demonstrate the importance of short-range contacts between active enhancers that constitute an Igk super-enhancer in B cells. Deletion of one element reduces the interaction frequency between other enhancers in the hub, which compromises the transcriptional output of each component. Furthermore, we establish that, in T cells, long-range contact and cooperation between the inactive Igk enhancer MiEκ and the active Tcrb enhancer Eβ alters enrichment of CBFβ binding in a manner that impacts Tcrb recombination. These findings underline the complexities of enhancer regulation and point to a role for localized and long-range enhancer-sharing between active and inactive elements in lineage- and stage-specific control.

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