Rewriting regulatory DNA to dissect and reprogram gene expression

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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.

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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

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