Gene regulation study reports surprising results: Extensive regions of DNA
belong to multiple gene switches

by University of Bonn



The abdomen of flies in which a specific enhancer region has been modified.
Depending on how much and which part of the region is modified, different
areas of the pigment pattern change. This shows that the region contains
several non-modular enhancers (blue = strong gene expression; red = weak
gene expression). Some sequences in the genome cause genes to be switched
on or off. Until now, each of these gene switches, or so-called enhancers,
was thought to have its own place on the DNA. Different enhancers are
therefore separated from each other, even if they control the same gene,
and switch it on in different parts of the body. A recent study from the
University of Bonn and the LMU Munich challenges this idea. The findings
are also important because gene switches are thought to play a central role
in evolution. The study has been published in the journal Science Advances.
The blueprint of plant and animal forms is encoded in their DNA. But only a
small part of the genome—about two percent in mammals—contains genes, the
instructions for making proteins. The rest largely controls when and where
these genes are active: how many of their transcripts are produced, and
thus how many proteins are made from these transcripts.  Some of these
regulatory sequences, called "enhancers," work like dimmer switches used to
modulate the light in our living room. Indeed, they specifically increase
the expression of a particular gene, where and when this gene is required.
Genes controlling morphology often respond to several independent
enhancers, each determining the expression of the gene in a different body
part. Until now, enhancers were thought to be modular. The term implies
that each enhancer occupies an isolated stretch of DNA. "We have shown,
however, that this is not absolutely true," explains Mariam Museridze. She
is a Ph.D. student at the Bonn Institute of Organismic Biology in the group
of Prof. Dr. Nicolas Gompel and the first author of the study. Gompel is
also a member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area (TRA) "Life & Health"
at the University of Bonn. The researchers studied how a gene called yellow
is regulated in the fruit fly Drosophila. This gene causes the insect to
produce the brownish pigment melanin. There are a number of enhancers that
control the activity of yellow. One of them, for example, is responsible
for the pigmentation of the maggots' teeth, while another is responsible
for the formation of the striped pattern on the fly's abdomen.  "We have
taken a closer look at two of these enhancers," says Museridze.  The first
controls the formation of a color pattern on the wings, while the second
controls the coloring of the head, thorax and abdomen. Both are active at
the same time during the fly's metamorphosis. The team discovered that the
body enhancer is not, as expected, located in a different region of DNA
from the wing enhancer.  Instead, there are extensive regions of DNA that
belong to both gene switches, i.e. they influence the pigmentation of both
the wing and the body.  The results suggest that the architecture of
regulatory sequences in the genome is much more complex than previously
thought. This has far-reaching implications for how traits change during
evolution. According to current knowledge, enhancers play a key role in
this process.This is because many proteins are so important to an organism
that a mutation in their gene (i.e., the DNA sequence that contains the
instructions for building the protein) would cause serious problems or even
certain death. As a result, genes that control body shape, such as the
number of wings or legs, rarely change over the course of evolution.
Enhancers offer a way out of this dilemma: when they mutate, the activity
of the corresponding gene changes, but only in a specific tissue and at a
specific time.

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matter—daily or weekly. "The cost of mutating an enhancer is therefore
often lower than the cost of mutating the gene directly," says Mariam
Museridze. This makes it easier for new traits to emerge during evolution.
It is like baking a cake: If you mix eggs, flour, milk and sugar, you can
get completely different types of dough, depending on the mixing ratio. In
this metaphor, the enhancers would be responsible for the quantity of
ingredients, not the type of ingredients. A genetic mutation is like
accidentally replacing one ingredient with something completely
different—for example, using sawdust instead of flour. The result will
certainly not taste very good. A mutation in an enhancer, on the other
hand, would change the amount of flour. "If enhancers are not as modular as
we thought, this means that mutations in them can have much broader
effects," says Museridze. This means that such a mutation could affect the
amount of several ingredients at the same time. However, it is also
possible that the enhancers retain their independence and continue to
control the amount of a single ingredient, even though their sequences are
interwoven and shared. "We now want to investigate these possibilities in
more detail," explains Professor Gompel. "We also want to find out how
general our findings are and how this affects our understanding of
evolutionary mechanisms."

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