Evolution of a polymorphic regulatory element in interferon-γ through transposition and mutation

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Abstract

Mammalian transposable elements have intrinsic regulatory elements that can activate neighboring genes, and it is speculated that they can also carry extrinsic transactivating DNA sequences to new genomic locations. We have identified a polymorphic segment of the human interferon-γ promoter region where two adjacent binding sites for NF-κB and NFAT originated from the insertion of an Alu element approximately 22-34 MYA. Both binding sites lie outside the Alu consensus sequence but within the boundaries of the insertion, suggesting that this segment of DNA was comobilized when the Alu element moved from another part of the genome. Sequence comparisons and examination of DNA-protein interactions across nine different primate species indicate that the inserted sequence contained the intact NFAT binding site, whereas the ability to bind NF-κB evolved through a series of mutations after the insertion. These observations are consistent with the notion that retropseudogenes can comobilize intact regulatory sequences to new locations and thereby influence the evolution of gene regulatory networks; however, the extent to which such events have shaped the evolution of gene regulation remains unknown.

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Ackerman, H., Udalova, I., Hull, J., & Kwiatkowski, D. (2002). Evolution of a polymorphic regulatory element in interferon-γ through transposition and mutation. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 19(6), 884–890. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a004145

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