Small DNA elements that act as both insulators and silencers in plants
Small DNA elements that act as both insulators and silencers in plants
Jores, T.; Mueth, N. A.; Tonnies, J.; Char, S. N.; Liu, B.; Grillo-Alvarado, V.; Abbitt, S.; Anand, A.; Deschamps, S.; Diehn, S.; Gordon-Kamm, B.; Jiao, S.; Munkvold, K.; Snowgren, H.; Sardesai, N.; Fields, S.; Yang, B.; Cuperus, J.; Queitsch, C.
AbstractInsulators are cis-regulatory elements that separate transcriptional units, whereas silencers are elements that repress transcription regardless of their position. In plants, these elements remain largely uncharacterized. Here, we use the massively parallel reporter assay Plant STARR-seq with short fragments of eight large insulators to identify more than 100 fragments that block enhancer activity. The short fragments can be combined to generate more powerful insulators that abolish the capacity of the strong viral 35S enhancer to activate the 35S minimal promoter. Unexpectedly, when tested upstream of weak enhancers, these fragments act as silencers and repress transcription. Thus, these elements are capable of both insulating or repressing transcription dependent upon regulatory context. We validate our findings in stable transgenic Arabidopsis, maize, and rice plants. The short elements identified here should be useful building blocks for plant biotechnology efforts.