We examined how a p53 enhancer transmits regulatory information in vivo. Using genetic ablation together with digital chromosome conformation capture and fluorescent in situ hybridization, we found that a Drosophila p53 enhancer region (referred to as the p53 response element [p53RE]) physically contacts targets in cis and across the centromere to control stress-responsive transcription at these sites. Furthermore, when placed at ectopic genomic positions, fragments spanning this element re-established chromatin contacts and partially restored target gene regulation to mutants lacking the native p53RE. Therefore, a defined p53 enhancer region is sufficient for longrange chromatin interactions that enable multigenic regulation. © 2013 Link et al.
CITATION STYLE
Link, N., Kurtz, P., O’Neal, M., Garcia-Hughes, G., & Abrams, J. M. (2013). A p53 enhancer region regulates target genes through chromatin conformations in cis and in trans. Genes and Development, 27(22), 2433–2438. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.225565.113
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