| Literature DB >> 31527394 |
Abstract
Determining aetiology of genetic disorders caused by damaging mutations in protein-coding genes is well established. However, understanding how mutations in the vast stretches of the noncoding genome contribute to genetic abnormalities remains a huge challenge. Cis-regulatory elements (CREs) or enhancers are an important class of noncoding elements. CREs function as the primary determinants of precise spatial and temporal regulation of their target genes during development by serving as docking sites for tissue-specific transcription factors. Although a large number of potential disease-associated CRE mutations are being identified in patients, lack of robust methods for mechanistically linking these mutations to disease phenotype is currently hampering the understanding of their roles in disease aetiology. Here, we have described the various systems available for testing the CRE potential of stretches of noncoding regions harbouring mutations implicated in human disease. We highlight advances in the field leading to the establishment of zebrafish as a powerful system for robust and cost-effective functional assays of CRE activity, enabling rapid identification of causal variants in regulatory regions and the validation of their role in disruption of appropriate gene expression.Entities:
Keywords: cis-regulation; gene regulation; human genetics; zebrafish
Year: 2019 PMID: 31527394 PMCID: PMC6784013 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines7030071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Characterisation and functional validation approaches of predicted/putative cis-regulatory elements (CREs).
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CRE sequence is analysed and cloned in vectors bearing minimal promoters and reporter genes, such as luciferase or GFP High-throughput versions use oligo-based synthesis to construct large numbers of barcoded reporter genes, which are transfected into the mammalian cells and quantified by RNA sequencing of their unique barcodes Suitable for high-throughput analysis (CRE-seq [ Enables functional testing of thousands of different CREs and provides a better understanding of enhancer code/grammar Loss of genomic context necessitating further validation in in vivo models Lacks the relevant biological context; the results cannot be extrapolated to physiological or disease conditions Bias in high-throughput methods due to stability or processing of reporter RNA |
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CRE-reporter constructs bearing CRE sequences driving fluorescent reporter genes are injected into zebrafish embryos. The spatio-temporal expression of the reporter gene is tracked by imaging as a measure of CRE activity during embryonic development, either in transiently injected embryos [ Highly suitable for imaging due to transparent nature of zebrafish embryos Highly cost effective and low maintenance compared to mouse transgenic experiments Use of multiple reporter genes allows detection of qualitative comparisons of activities between two different CREs or WT vs. Mutant CRE allele [ Some high-throughput screening platforms e.g., Automated Reporter Quantification in vivo (ARQiv) have been developed [ CRE-reporter constructs can be integrated in pre-determined sites in the zebrafish genome using phiC31-mediated recombination [ Bias arises in analysis due to random integration of the CRE-reporter cassette in the zebrafish genome; multiple transgenic embryos have to be analysed per CRE for confident assignment of activity. Although this is avoided in the targeted integration strategy using phiC31 recombination, specialized zebrafish transgenic lines are needed for the assay Lack of sequence conservation over large regions of human genome and the duplication of a large number of genes in the zebrafish genome restricts the full exploitation of this powerful system Loss of genomic context, necessitating further validation in in vivo models |
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CRE-reporter assays in mice performed by generating stable or transient transgenic lines using constructs bearing CRE sequences driving lacZ or fluorescent reporter genes [ CRE activity analysed in vivo provides a highly relevant context of embryonic development to assess activity Results obtained can be rapidly extrapolated to human situations due to the close evolutionary distance between human and mice Whole genome views have been generated using these assays for human and mouse CREs and are available as the VISTA enhancer browser Assays adapted to capture CRE activity in the context of precise genomic location using transgenic enhancer trap lines detecting local enhancer activity at different genomic integration sites [ Limited application of imaging techniques for assessing CRE activity due to the opaqueness of the mice embryos Analysis of CRE activity over the complete time course of embryonic development is cumbersome, slow and expensive compared to similar analysis in zebrafish Loss of genomic context necessitating further validation in in vivo models Enhancer trap methods generate massive rearrangements in the locus investigated, thus limited application in precisely defining the region’s enhancer activity within a genomic region |
Figure 1In vivo characterisation of disease-associated cis-regulatory variants by dual fluorescence reporter transgenic analysis in zebrafish. Schematic representation of the assay pipeline (modified from [20]). Both alleles (wild type and mutant) of potential disease-associated CREs are cloned in a construct with a reporter cassette of choice, to create the cis-element-reporter cassette flanked by Tol2 sites. Gata2-promoter (g2 prom) derived from mouse genome is included in the CRE-reporter constructs to serve as a minimal promoter in the assay. Co-injection of reporter constructs containing wild type (Wt) and mutant (Mut) versions of the CRE with Tol2 transposase-encoding RNA into early zebrafish embryos results in independent integration of the reporter cassettes. Transgenic founders (F0) are bred to establish transgenic lines. Expression patterns are examined in fish of F1 or later generations. Differences between Wt and Mut elements can be compared directly in the same fish using the GFP and mCherry fluorescent reporters.