Donor preference meets heterochromatin: Moonlighting activities of a recombinational enhancer in saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Abstract

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a small, intergenic region known as the recombination enhancer regulates donor selection during mating-type switching and also helps shape the conformation of chromosome III. Using an assay that detects transient losses of heterochromatic repression, we found that the recombination enhancer also acts at a distance in cis to modify the stability of gene silencing. In a mating-type-specific manner, the recombination enhancer destabilized the heterochromatic repression of a gene located ~17 kbp away. This effect depended on a subregion of the recombination enhancer that is largely sufficient to determine donor preference. Therefore, this subregion affects both recombination and transcription from a distance. These observations identify a rare example of long-range transcriptional regulation in yeast and raise the question of whether other cis elements also mediate dual effects on recombination and gene expression.

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Dodson, A. E., & Rine, J. (2016). Donor preference meets heterochromatin: Moonlighting activities of a recombinational enhancer in saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics, 204(3), 1065–1074. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.116.194696

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