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Evolution of mouse circadian enhancers from transposable elements

Julius Judd, Hayley Sanderson, Cédric Feschotte

Posted on: 15 December 2020 , updated on: 16 December 2020

Preprint posted on 10 November 2020

Article now published in Genome Biology at http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-021-02409-9

Transposable elements help set the pace. Julius Judd, Hayley Sanderson and Cédric Feschotte show how RSINE1 transposons evolve into circadian enhancers in the mouse liver.

Selected by Miguel V. Almeida

Categories: genomics

Background

Most, if not all, genomes are inhabited by transposable elements (TEs) or their remnants. TEs are genetic elements that can mobilize from one genomic locus into another via “cut-and-paste” or “copy-and-paste” mechanisms. TE mobility can bring about undesirable consequences for the host organism, for example genome instability, or deregulation of endogenous gene expression when insertions occur at or near endogenous genes. However, many other studies support important roles of TEs in the evolution of genomes and gene expression. In these cases, TEs are considered to undergo a “domestication” process whereby they acquire a function beneficial for their host.

One prominent example of TE domestication in animals is the repurposing of specific TE families into cis regulatory regions, like enhancers, that are bound by transcription factors and regulate endogenous gene expression. Some TEs have their own “ready-made” cis regulatory sequences, which are recognized and bound by endogenous transcription factors, allowing for transcription by RNA Polymerase II. It is possible to envision an alternative model whereby TEs lacking “ready-made” motifs recognized by endogenous transcription factors acquire cis regulatory potential. Regulatory activity can be acquired de novo, by mutation of an ancestral pre-motif to a motif more efficiently bound by transcription factors. Examples of the latter model are lacking. In a new preprint, Judd and colleagues show how the RSINE1 TE family was repurposed as enhancers of circadian gene expression after mutation of ancestral pre-motifs.

 

Key findings

To understand whether TEs are in cis regulators of the mammalian circadian gene regulatory network, the authors decided to focus on the mouse liver. The mouse liver circadian gene regulatory network is deeply conserved and well characterized, with many publicly available datasets. First, analysis of ChIP-seq datasets of the six core circadian regulators (CRs; namely CLOCK, BMAL1, CRY1, CRY2, PER1 and PER2) showed an 8%-14% overlap of the ChIP-seq peaks with TEs or other DNA repeats (not counting low complexity and simple repeats). A temporal analysis of CR binding showed that repeat-derived peaks display an oscillatory profile similar to CR peaks not derived from repeats.

As there are many types of TEs, the authors then interrogated which TEs are enriched in the repeat-derived peaks. The repeat-derived CR binding sites were enriched with TEs of a particular family: RSINE1. SINEs are short interspersed nuclear elements typically derived from RNA Pol III transcripts. The CR-bound RSINE1 elements displayed patterns of DNase hypersensitivity, H3K27 acetylation and RNA Pol II occupancy typical of active enhancers.

RSINE1s have E-Box motifs, each of which differ by 1-2 nucleotides from the optimal motifs bound by CRs. Two of these E-box motifs are present uniquely in RSINE1s, but not in closely related SINEs. These two E-box motifs of RSINE1s are in tandem, creating an optimal binding site for critical CRs. Interestingly, the mutations required in these E-boxes to produce an optimal CR-binding site are C-T mutations, which arise often as a result of deamination in methylated DNA (more on that below). CR-bound RSINE1s tended to have the optimal CR-binding motif, when compared to RSINE1 elements not bound by CRs. Phylogenetic analysis of RSINE1s suggests that the ancestral RSINE1 sequence had a proto-motif, not the optimal motif, suggesting that RSINE1s had to acquire CR binding by mutation and were not a “ready-made” CR-binding motif.

RSINE1s co-option is context- and lineage-dependent. Indeed, RSINE1s that insert close to pre-existing CR-binding sites are more likely to evolve a perfect CR-binding motif and to be co-opted as circadian enhancers. Luciferase assays with RSINE1 elements supported enhancer activity and context-dependency as their flanking regions in the genome attenuated RSINE1s enhancer activity. Importantly, the evolved consensus of RSINE1 matching the preferential CR-binding motifs strongly enhanced luciferase expression. Lastly, the authors demonstrated that RSINE1-derived binding sites tend to be mouse specific, whereas non-TE-derived CR-binding sites are generally more deeply conserved.

 

What I like about this preprint

It is currently well established that TEs are often domesticated and provide in cis regulation to host genes. However, the process of domestication has remained a bit of a black box. This work brilliantly dissects how a specific TE family becomes domesticated in the circadian gene regulatory circuit in the mouse liver. The authors put forward a model for this (Figure 1). RSINE1s bearing motifs related to those of CR-binding sites spread across the genome. Pre-existing binding sites of CRs make favorable genomic regions for RSINE1 insertions to mature into circadian enhancers by evolving better binding sites for CRs from their proto-motifs. I found it fascinating that the single substitutions required to make two of the consensus RSINE1 E-boxes into a CR-bound consensus E-box were C-T substitutions in a CpG context. These mutations can arise as a product of deamination of methylated DNA. As TEs are often methylated by host defense pathways in the germline, this observation draws a likely evolutionary path.

Figure 1. Model of RSINE1 integration as circadian enhancers. Figure 6B in the preprint, made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license. CRs, circadian regulators; NRs, nuclear receptors; TF, transcription factor; Ac, acetylation.

 

All in all it’s great work, but do not take it from me. Go on and read the preprint and check the first author’s nice Twitter thread on his work (https://twitter.com/judd_julius/status/1326218161209929729).

 

Questions to the authors

  • Are RSINE 1 elements still mobile? Do you think spurious RSINE1 insertion in specific loci and consequent gene deregulation could contribute to liver disease?
  • Circadian regulation occurs in several tissues and you did look at BMAL1 ChIP-seq in liver, heart and kidney, but saw that RSINE1 elements were overlapping with the BMAL1 peaks mostly in liver. Why do you think RSINE1 elements are only integrating into the circadian gene regulatory network in the liver? As the circadian regulators are similarly expressed in other tissues, would this be in line with chromatin more permissive for RSINE1 co-option in the liver?
  • Do you expect other lineage-specific TEs (perhaps other SINE families) to be entwined in the circadian gene regulatory network in humans?

 

Want to know more?

Regulatory activities of transposable elements: from conflicts to benefits, Chuong et al., 2017.

https://www.nature.com/articles/nrg.2016.139/

 

A field guide to eukaryotic transposable elements, Wells & Feschotte, 2020.

https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-genet-040620-022145

 

Transcriptional architecture of the mammalian circadian clock, Takahashi, 2017. https://www.nature.com/articles/nrg.2016.150/

 

Tags: circadian, cis regulation, enhancers, mouse liver, transcription factors, transposable element

doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/prelights.26442

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Author's response

Julius A. Judd & Cedric Feschotte shared

  • Are RSINE 1 elements still mobile? Do you think spurious RSINE1 insertion in specific loci and consequent gene deregulation could contribute to liver disease?

Most likely RSINE1 elements are no longer mobile because we don’t find evidence of recently amplified copies of that family. However, it is possible that C to T mutations in the E-Box proto-motifs of existing RSINE1 elements that have not yet had this mutation could give rise to gene deregulation, though we did not look for this.

 

  • Circadian regulation occurs in several tissues and you did look at BMAL1 ChIP-seq in liver, heart and kidney, but saw that RSINE1 elements were overlapping with the BMAL1 peaks mostly in liver. Why do you think RSINE1 elements are only integrating into the circadian gene regulatory network in the liver? As the circadian regulators are similarly expressed in other tissues, would this be in line with chromatin more permissive for RSINE1 co-option in the liver?

We did not specifically look for this, but we suspect this is because of the RORE motifs (which are bound by nuclear receptors) that RSINE1 have seeded in addition to E-Box motifs. Nuclear receptors are TFs that are known to be under circadian control and are key metabolic regulators in the liver. We think the combination of E-Box and RORE motifs provide RSINE1 with circadian enhancer activity in the liver specifically.

 

  • Do you expect other lineage-specific TEs (perhaps other SINE families) to be entwined in the circadian gene regulatory network in humans?

We have not looked in humans because most of the genomics data for circadian gene regulation is only available for the mouse. However, it is tempting to speculate that TEs have contributed circadian TF binding sites in the human genome because for every TF previously examined in human cells it has been found that one or a few TE families are enriched for binding events. Also, the model we outlined here for the maturation of TF binding sites from proto-motifs introduced by transposon insertions may be broadly applicable to SINEs and other short transposons. Indeed, SINEs are the most frequent TEs in mammalian genomes and they tend to accumulate closer to genes and cis-regulatory elements where longer TEs like LINEs and endogenous retroviruses are less likely to be tolerated.

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