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Publication : Functional autonomy of distant-acting human enhancers.

First Author  Visel A Year  2009
Journal  Genomics Volume  93
Issue  6 Pages  509-13
PubMed ID  19268701 Mgi Jnum  J:155782
Mgi Id  MGI:4415675 Doi  10.1016/j.ygeno.2009.02.002
Citation  Visel A, et al. (2009) Functional autonomy of distant-acting human enhancers. Genomics 93(6):509-13
abstractText  Many human genes are associated with dispersed arrays of transcriptional enhancers that regulate their expression in time and space. Studies in invertebrate model systems have suggested that these elements could function as discrete and independent regulatory units, but the in vivo combinatorial properties of vertebrate enhancers remain poorly understood. To explore the modularity and regulatory autonomy of human developmental enhancers, we experimentally concatenated up to four enhancers from different genes and used a transgenic mouse assay to compare the in vivo activity of these compound elements with that of the single modules. In all of the six different combinations of elements tested, the reporter gene activity patterns were additive without signs of interference between the individual modules, indicating that regulatory specificity was maintained despite the presence of closely-positioned heterologous enhancers. Even in cases where two elements drove expression in close anatomical proximity, such as within neighboring subregions of the developing limb bud, the compound patterns did not show signs of cross-inhibition between individual elements or novel expression sites. These data indicate that human developmental enhancers are highly modular and functionally autonomous and suggest that genomic enhancer shuffling may have contributed to the evolution of complex gene expression patterns in vertebrates.
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