Lineage-specific adjacent IFNG and IL26 genes share a common distal enhancer element
Certain groups of physically linked genes remain linked over long periods of evolutionary time. The general view is that such evolutionary conservation confers ‘fitness’ to the species. Why gene order confers ‘fitness’ to the species is incompletely understood. For example, linkage of IL26 and IFNG...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Genes and immunity 2012-09, Vol.13 (6), p.481-488 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Certain groups of physically linked genes remain linked over long periods of evolutionary time. The general view is that such evolutionary conservation confers ‘fitness’ to the species. Why gene order confers ‘fitness’ to the species is incompletely understood. For example, linkage of
IL26
and
IFNG
is preserved over evolutionary time yet Th17 lineages express
IL26
and Th1 lineages express
IFNG
. We considered the hypothesis that distal enhancer elements may be shared between adjacent genes, which would require linkage be maintained in evolution. We test this hypothesis using a bacterial artificial chromosome transgenic model with deletions of specific conserved non-coding sequences. We identify one enhancer element uniquely required for
IL26
expression but not for
IFNG
expression. We identify a second enhancer element positioned between
IL26
and
IFNG
required for both
IL26
and
IFNG
expression. One function of this enhancer is to facilitate recruitment of RNA polymerase II to promoters of both genes. Thus, sharing of distal enhancers between adjacent genes may contribute to evolutionary preservation of gene order. |
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ISSN: | 1466-4879 1476-5470 |
DOI: | 10.1038/gene.2012.22 |