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Article

An Organizational Hub of Developmentally Regulated Chromatin Loops in the Drosophila Antennapedia Complex

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Pages 4018-4029 | Received 02 Jul 2015, Accepted 14 Sep 2015, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Chromatin boundary elements (CBEs) are widely distributed in the genome and mediate formation of chromatin loops, but their roles in gene regulation remain poorly understood. The complex expression pattern of the Drosophila homeotic gene Sex combs reduced (Scr) is directed by an unusually long regulatory sequence harboring diverse cis elements and an intervening neighbor gene fushi tarazu (ftz). Here we report the presence of a multitude of CBEs in the Scr regulatory region. Selective and dynamic pairing among these CBEs mediates developmentally regulated chromatin loops. In particular, the SF1 boundary plays a central role in organizing two subsets of chromatin loops: one subset encloses ftz, limiting its access by the surrounding Scr enhancers and compartmentalizing distinct histone modifications, and the other subset subdivides the Scr regulatory sequences into independent enhancer access domains. We show that these CBEs exhibit diverse enhancer-blocking activities that vary in strength and tissue distribution. Tandem pairing of SF1 and SF2, two strong CBEs that flank the ftz domain, allows the distal enhancers to bypass their block in transgenic Drosophila, providing a mechanism for the endogenous Scr enhancer to circumvent the ftz domain. Our study demonstrates how an endogenous CBE network, centrally orchestrated by SF1, could remodel the genomic environment to facilitate gene regulation during development.

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.00663-15.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Chris Rushlow for the generous gift of the attB-containing plasmid. We thank Jingwen Yue for assistance with microinjection. We thank Ping Shen, Edward Kipreos, Matt Romine, and Jeff Gardner for critical reading of the manuscript.

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