Abstract
Recent Hi-C measurements have revealed numerous intra- and inter-chromosomal interactions in various eukaryotic cells. To what extent these interactions regulate gene expression is not clear. This question is particularly intriguing in budding yeast because it has extensive long-distance chromosomal interactions but few cases of gene regulation over-a-distance. Here, we developed a medium-throughput assay to screen for functional long-distance interactions that affect the average expression level of a reporter gene as well as its cell-to-cell variability (noise). We ectopically inserted an insulated MET3 promoter (MET3pr) flanked by ~1kb invariable sequences into thousands of genomic loci, allowing it to make contacts with different parts of the genome, and assayed the MET3pr activity in single cells. Changes of MET3pr activity in this case necessarily involve mechanisms that function over a distance. MET3pr has similar activities at most locations. However, at some locations, they deviate from the norm and exhibit three distinct patterns including low expression / high noise, low expression / low noise, and high expression / low noise. We provided evidence that these three patterns of MET3pr expression are caused by Sir2-mediated silencing, transcriptional interference, and 3D clustering. The clustering also occurs in the native genome and enhances the transcription of endogenous Met4-targeted genes. Overall, our results demonstrate that a small fraction of long-distance chromosomal interactions can affect gene expression in yeast.
Highlights
Cell proliferation and differentiation depend on rigorously controlled gene activities
Eukaryotic transcription occurs within the nucleus where DNA is packaged into high order chromosome structures
Some long-distance chromosomal interactions play an important role in gene regulation in higher eukaryotic species, such as mouse and human
Summary
Cell proliferation and differentiation depend on rigorously controlled gene activities. Long-distance gene regulation is best elucidated in some specific genomic loci in multi-cellular organisms, such as the locus control region of the murine β-globin genes [4,5,6,7]. With the recent development of Chromosome Conformation Capture technique (3C) and its derivatives (4C, Hi-C, etc.), numerous intra- and inter-chromosomal interactions have been detected in different model organisms [8,9,10,11]. These interaction patterns can change with cell types, developmental stages, and environmental stress [12,13,14,15]. In general, to what extent these interactions regulate gene expression is not clear
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