PLoS Genetics (Jul 2016)

Formation of a Polycomb-Domain in the Absence of Strong Polycomb Response Elements.

  • Sandip De,
  • Apratim Mitra,
  • Yuzhong Cheng,
  • Karl Pfeifer,
  • Judith A Kassis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006200
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. e1006200

Abstract

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Polycomb group response elements (PREs) in Drosophila are DNA-elements that recruit Polycomb proteins (PcG) to chromatin and regulate gene expression. PREs are easily recognizable in the Drosophila genome as strong peaks of PcG-protein binding over discrete DNA fragments; many small but statistically significant PcG peaks are also observed in PcG domains. Surprisingly, in vivo deletion of the four characterized strong PREs from the PcG regulated invected-engrailed (inv-en) gene complex did not disrupt the formation of the H3K27me3 domain and did not affect inv-en expression in embryos or larvae suggesting the presence of redundant PcG recruitment mechanism. Further, the 3D-structure of the inv-en domain was only minimally altered by the deletion of the strong PREs. A reporter construct containing a 7.5kb en fragment that contains three weak peaks but no large PcG peaks forms an H3K27me3 domain and is PcG-regulated. Our data suggests a model for the recruitment of PcG-complexes to Drosophila genes via interactions with multiple, weak PREs spread throughout an H3K27me3 domain.