Abstract
Regulatory DNA provides a platform for transcription factor binding to encode cell-type-specific patterns of gene expression. However, the effects and programmability of regulatory DNA sequences remain difficult to map or predict. Here, we develop variant effects from flow-sorting experiments with CRISPR targeting screens (Variant-EFFECTS) to introduce hundreds of designed edits to endogenous regulatory DNA and quantify their effects on gene expression. We systematically dissect and reprogram 3 regulatory elements for 2 genes in 2 cell types. These data reveal endogenous binding sites with effects specific to genomic context, transcription factor motifs with cell-type-specific activities, and limitations of computational models for predicting the effect sizes of variants. We identify small edits that can tune gene expression over a large dynamic range, suggesting new possibilities for prime-editing-based therapeutics targeting regulatory DNA. Variant-EFFECTS provides a generalizable tool to dissect regulatory DNA and to identify genome editing reagents that tune gene expression in an endogenous context.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Martyn, G. E., Montgomery, M. T., Jones, H., Guo, K., Doughty, B. R., Linder, J., … Engreitz, J. M. (2025). Rewriting regulatory DNA to dissect and reprogram gene expression. Cell, 188(12), 3349-3366.e23. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2025.03.034
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.