4.8 Article

Short tandem repeats are important contributors to silencer elements in T cells

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 10, Pages 4845-4866

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkad187

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This study uses the STARR-seq method to identify and characterize silencer elements in mammals. The identified silencers are associated with chromatin marks and known transcriptional repressors, and are involved in the repression of non-T cell genes and genes regulated during T cell differentiation. Additionally, the study reveals the role of short tandem repeats in silencer activity.
The action of cis-regulatory elements with either activation or repression functions underpins the precise regulation of gene expression during normal development and cell differentiation. Gene activation by the combined activities of promoters and distal enhancers has been extensively studied in normal and pathological contexts. In sharp contrast, gene repression by cis-acting silencers, defined as genetic elements that negatively regulate gene transcription in a position-independent fashion, is less well understood. Here, we repurpose the STARR-seq approach as a novel high-throughput reporter strategy to quantitatively assess silencer activity in mammals. We assessed silencer activity from DNase hypersensitive I sites in a mouse T cell line. Identified silencers were associated with either repressive or active chromatin marks and enriched for binding motifs of known transcriptional repressors. CRISPR-mediated genomic deletions validated the repressive function of distinct silencers involved in the repression of non-T cell genes and genes regulated during T cell differentiation. Finally, we unravel an association of silencer activity with short tandem repeats, highlighting the role of repetitive elements in silencer activity. Our results provide a general strategy for genome-wide identification and characterization of silencer elements.

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