Facultative CTCF sites moderate mammary superenhancer activity and regulate juxtaposed gene in non-mammary cells

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Abstract

Precise spatiotemporal gene regulation is paramount for the establishment and maintenance of cell-specific programmes. Although there is evidence that chromatin neighbourhoods, formed by the zinc-finger protein CTCF, can sequester enhancers and their target genes, there is limited in vivo evidence for CTCF demarcating super-enhancers and preventing cross talk between distinct regulatory elements. Here, we address these questions in the Wap locus with its mammary-specific super-enhancer separated by CTCF sites from widely expressed genes. Mutational analysis demonstrates that the Wap super-enhancer controls Ramp3, despite three separating CTCF sites. Their deletion in mice results in elevated expression of Ramp3 in mammary tissue through augmented promoter-enhancer interactions. Deletion of the distal CTCF-binding site results in loss of Ramp3 expression in non-mammary tissues. This suggests that CTCF sites are porous borders, allowing a super-enhancer to activate a secondary target. Likewise, CTCF sites shield a widely expressed gene from suppressive influences of a silent locus.

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Willi, M., Yoo, K. H., Reinisch, F., Kuhns, T. M., Lee, H. K., Wang, C., & Hennighausen, L. (2017). Facultative CTCF sites moderate mammary superenhancer activity and regulate juxtaposed gene in non-mammary cells. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms16069

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