Exploiting transcription factor binding site clustering to identify cis-regulatory modules involved in pattern formation in the Drosophila genome

  1. Benjamin P. Berman*,
  2. Yutaka Nibu*,
  3. Barret D. Pfeiffer,
  4. Pavel Tomancak*,,
  5. Susan E. Celniker,§,
  6. Michael Levine*,
  7. Gerald M. Rubin*,,, and
  8. Michael B. Eisen*,§,
  1. *Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; and §Department of Genome Sciences, Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Orlando Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720
  1. Contributed by Gerald M. Rubin

Abstract

A major challenge in interpreting genome sequences is understanding how the genome encodes the information that specifies when and where a gene will be expressed. The first step in this process is the identification of regions of the genome that contain regulatory information. In higher eukaryotes, this cis-regulatory information is organized into modular units [cis-regulatory modules (CRMs)] of a few hundred base pairs. A common feature of these cis-regulatory modules is the presence of multiple binding sites for multiple transcription factors. Here, we evaluate the extent to which the tendency for transcription factor binding sites to be clustered can be used as the basis for the computational identification of cis-regulatory modules. By using published DNA binding specificity data for five transcription factors active in the early Drosophila embryo, we identified genomic regions containing unusually high concentrations of predicted binding sites for these factors. A significant fraction of these binding site clusters overlap known CRMs that are regulated by these factors. In addition, many of the remaining clusters are adjacent to genes expressed in a pattern characteristic of genes regulated by these factors. We tested one of the newly identified clusters, mapping upstream of the gap gene giant (gt), and show that it acts as an enhancer that recapitulates the posterior expression pattern of gt.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Mailstop 84-171, One Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720. E-mail: mbeisen{at}lbl.gov.

  • See commentary on page 546.

  • Only 15 of 828 whole mount in situ hybridizations performed on randomly selected genes by the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (http://fruitfly.berkeley.edu) show localized anterior/posterior expression during the blastoderm stage. Based on this result, and accounting for the proportion of noncoding DNA in intergenic regions and introns, we estimate that a randomly selected 700-bp fragment has a 3.2% chance of being adjacent to a gene expressed in such a pattern.

  • Abbreviations:
    CRM,
    cis-regulatory module;
    PWM,
    position weight matrix
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