Abstract

Identification of lineage-specific innovations in genomic control elements is critical for understanding transcriptional regulatory networks and phenotypic heterogeneity. We analyzed, from an evolutionary perspective, the binding regions of seven mammalian transcription factors (ESR1, TP53, MYC, RELA, POU5F1, SOX2, and CTCF) identified on a genome-wide scale by different chromatin immunoprecipitation approaches and found that only a minority of sites appear to be conserved at the sequence level. Instead, we uncovered a pervasive association with genomic repeats by showing that a large fraction of the bona fide binding sites for five of the seven transcription factors (ESR1, TP53, POU5F1, SOX2, and CTCF) are embedded in distinctive families of transposable elements. Using the age of the repeats, we established that these repeat-associated binding sites (RABS) have been associated with significant regulatory expansions throughout the mammalian phylogeny. We validated the functional significance of these RABS by showing that they are over-represented in proximity of regulated genes and that the binding motifs within these repeats have undergone evolutionary selection. Our results demonstrate that transcriptional regulatory networks are highly dynamic in eukaryotic genomes and that transposable elements play an important role in expanding the repertoire of binding sites.

Keywords

BiologyCTCFTransposable elementGeneticsDNA binding siteTranscription factorGenomeChromatin immunoprecipitationEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyGenePromoterEnhancerGene expression

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
18
Issue
11
Pages
1752-1762
Citations
611
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

611
OpenAlex

Cite This

Guillaume Bourque, Bernard Leong, Vinsensius B. Vega et al. (2008). Evolution of the mammalian transcription factor binding repertoire via transposable elements. Genome Research , 18 (11) , 1752-1762. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.080663.108

Identifiers

DOI
10.1101/gr.080663.108