4.8 Article

Complementary Alu sequences mediate enhancer-promoter selectivity

Journal

NATURE
Volume 619, Issue 7971, Pages 868-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06323-x

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By using RNA in situ conformation sequencing technology, we generated high-confidence enhancer-promoter RNA interaction maps and found that 37.9% of the interaction sites overlapped with Alu sequences. The interacting Alu and non-Alu RNA sequences tend to be complementary and potentially form duplexes. Knockout of Alu elements disrupts enhancer-promoter looping, while Alu insertion or CRISPR-dCasRx-mediated Alu tethering to unregulated promoter RNAs can create new loops to similar enhancers. Mapping noncoding risk variants back to the enhancer-promoter RNA interaction maps enabled the construction of variant-to-function maps, including deletions or insertions in Alu elements that affect protein-coding genes. We demonstrated that polymorphic Alu insertion at the PTK2 enhancer can promote tumorigenesis. Our study uncovers a principle for determining enhancer-promoter pairing specificity and provides a framework to link noncoding risk variants to their molecular functions.
Enhancers determine spatiotemporal gene expression programs by engaging with long-range promoters(1-4). However, it remains unknown how enhancers find their cognate promoters. We recently developed a RNA in situ conformation sequencing technology to identify enhancer-promoter connectivity using pairwise interacting enhancer RNAs and promoter-derived noncoding RNAs5,6. Here we apply this technology to generate high-confidence enhancer-promoter RNA interaction maps in six additional cell lines. Using these maps, we discover that 37.9% of the enhancer-promoter RNA interaction sites are overlapped with Alu sequences. These pairwise interacting Alu and non-Alu RNA sequences tend to be complementary and potentially form duplexes. Knockout of Alu elements compromises enhancer-promoter looping, whereas Alu insertion or CRISPR-dCasRx-mediated Alu tethering to unregulated promoter RNAs can create new loops to homologous enhancers. Mapping 535,404 noncoding risk variants back to the enhancer-promoter RNA interaction maps enabled us to construct variant-to-function maps for interpreting their molecular functions, including 15,318 deletions or insertions in 11,677 Alu elements that affect 6,497 protein-coding genes. We further demonstrate that polymorphic Alu insertion at the PTK2 enhancer can promote tumorigenesis. Our study uncovers a principle for determining enhancer-promoter pairing specificity and provides a framework to link noncoding risk variants to their molecular functions.

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