Cell type- and transcription-independent spatial proximity between enhancers and promoters.
Yasmine MianLi WangAdib KeikhosraviKonnie GuoTom MisteliH Efsun ArdaElizabeth H FinnPublished in: Molecular biology of the cell (2024)
Cell type-specific enhancers are critically important for lineage specification. The mechanisms that determine cell-type specificity of enhancer activity, however, are not fully understood. Most current models for how enhancers function invoke physical proximity between enhancer elements and their target genes. Here, we use an imaging-based approach to examine the spatial relationship of cell type-specific enhancers and their target genes with single-cell resolution. Using high-throughput microscopy, we measure the spatial distance from target promoters to their cell type-specific active and inactive enhancers in individual pancreatic cells derived from distinct lineages. We find increased proximity of all promoter-enhancer pairs relative to non-enhancer pairs separated by similar genomic distances. Strikingly, spatial proximity between enhancers and target genes was unrelated to tissue-specific enhancer activity. Furthermore, promoter-enhancer proximity did not correlate with the expression status of target genes. Our results suggest that promoter-enhancer pairs exist in a distinctive chromatin environment but that genome folding is not a universal driver of cell-type specificity in enhancer function.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- binding protein
- genome wide identification
- genome wide
- high throughput
- single cell
- dna methylation
- single molecule
- high resolution
- physical activity
- poor prognosis
- bioinformatics analysis
- induced apoptosis
- mental health
- oxidative stress
- optical coherence tomography
- copy number
- high speed
- structural basis