| Literature DB >> 28024300 |
Enrico Cannavò1, Nils Koelling2, Dermot Harnett1, David Garfield1, Francesco P Casale2, Lucia Ciglar1, Hilary E Gustafson1, Rebecca R Viales1, Raquel Marco-Ferreres1, Jacob F Degner1, Bingqing Zhao1, Oliver Stegle2, Ewan Birney2, Eileen E M Furlong1.
Abstract
Embryonic development is driven by tightly regulated patterns of gene expression, despite extensive genetic variation among individuals. Studies of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) indicate that genetic variation frequently alters gene expression in cell-culture models and differentiated tissues. However, the extent and types of genetic variation impacting embryonic gene expression, and their interactions with developmental programs, remain largely unknown. Here we assessed the effect of genetic variation on transcriptional (expression levels) and post-transcriptional (3' RNA processing) regulation across multiple stages of metazoan development, using 80 inbred Drosophila wild isolates, identifying thousands of developmental-stage-specific and shared QTL. Given the small blocks of linkage disequilibrium in Drosophila, we obtain near base-pair resolution, resolving causal mutations in developmental enhancers, validated transcription-factor-binding sites and RNA motifs. This fine-grain mapping uncovered extensive allelic interactions within enhancers that have opposite effects, thereby buffering their impact on enhancer activity. QTL affecting 3' RNA processing identify new functional motifs leading to transcript isoform diversity and changes in the lengths of 3' untranslated regions. These results highlight how developmental stage influences the effects of genetic variation and uncover multiple mechanisms that regulate and buffer expression variation during embryogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28024300 DOI: 10.1038/nature20802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962