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Published March 15, 2009 | Supplemental Material + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Design flexibility in cis-regulatory control of gene expression: synthetic and comparative evidence

Abstract

In early Drosophila embryos, the transcription factor Dorsal regulates patterns of gene expression and cell fate specification along the dorsal–ventral axis. How gene expression is produced within the broad lateral domain of the presumptive neurogenic ectoderm is not understood. To investigate transcriptional control during neurogenic ectoderm specification, we examined divergence and function of an embryonic cis-regulatory element controlling the gene short gastrulation (sog). While transcription factor binding sites are not completely conserved, we demonstrate that these sequences are bona fide regulatory elements, despite variable regulatory architecture. Mutation of conserved sequences revealed that putative transcription factor binding sites for Dorsal and Zelda, a ubiquitous maternal transcription factor, are required for proper sog expression. When Zelda and Dorsal sites are paired in a synthetic regulatory element, broad lateral expression results. However, synthetic regulatory elements that contain Dorsal and an additional activator also drive expression throughout the neurogenic ectoderm. Our results suggest that interaction between Dorsal and Zelda drives expression within the presumptive neurogenic ectoderm, but they also demonstrate that regulatory architecture directing expression in this domain is flexible. We propose a model for neurogenic ectoderm specification in which gene regulation occurs at the intersection of temporal and spatial transcription factor inputs.

Additional Information

© 2008 Elsevier Inc. Received 16 September 2008; revised 13 December 2008; accepted 16 December 2008. Available online 25 December 2008. We are grateful to Christine Rushlow for sharing unpublished information regarding Zelda, Kate Senger and Mike Levine for sharing SELEX data, and Eric Davidson for helpful discussions. We thank Brant Peterson and Dmitri Papatsenko for help with the evolutionary analysis of binding sites and the alignment presentation, Desirea Mecenas for providing excellent technical assistance and helpful insights regarding ubiquitous activators, Titus Brown for his support in generating position weight matrices and for introducing us to the program Cartwheel.We also thank Greg Reeves, who was particularly helpful with the mutant analysis, Sarah Payne for providing comments on the manuscript, and Junhyong Kim for advice regarding the in situ hybridization conditions in other Drosophilid species. This work was supported by grants to A.S. from the NIH (R01 GM077668) and the Searle Scholars Program.

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Accepted Version - nihms100750.pdf

Supplemental Material - Liberman2009p72810.1016j.ydbio.2008.12.020_supp1.doc

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