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Publication : Krüppel-like factors compete for promoters and enhancers to fine-tune transcription.

First Author  Ilsley MD Year  2017
Journal  Nucleic Acids Res Volume  45
Issue  11 Pages  6572-6588
PubMed ID  28541545 Mgi Jnum  J:249139
Mgi Id  MGI:5924165 Doi  10.1093/nar/gkx441
Citation  Ilsley MD, et al. (2017) Kruppel-like factors compete for promoters and enhancers to fine-tune transcription. Nucleic Acids Res 45(11):6572-6588
abstractText  Kruppel-like factors (KLFs) are a family of 17 transcription factors characterized by a conserved DNA-binding domain of three zinc fingers and a variable N-terminal domain responsible for recruiting cofactors. KLFs have diverse functions in stem cell biology, embryo patterning, and tissue homoeostasis. KLF1 and related family members function as transcriptional activators via recruitment of co-activators such as EP300, whereas KLF3 and related members act as transcriptional repressors via recruitment of C-terminal Binding Proteins. KLF1 directly activates the Klf3 gene via an erythroid-specific promoter. Herein, we show KLF1 and KLF3 bind common as well as unique sites within the erythroid cell genome by ChIP-seq. We show KLF3 can displace KLF1 from key erythroid gene promoters and enhancers in vivo. Using 4sU RNA labelling and RNA-seq, we show this competition results in reciprocal transcriptional outputs for >50 important genes. Furthermore, Klf3-/- mice displayed exaggerated recovery from anemic stress and persistent cell cycling consistent with a role for KLF3 in dampening KLF1-driven proliferation. We suggest this study provides a paradigm for how KLFs work in incoherent feed-forward loops or networks to fine-tune transcription and thereby control diverse biological processes such as cell proliferation.
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