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Shared nucleotide flanks confer transcriptional competency to bZip core motifs.

Citation
Cohen, D. M., et al. “Shared Nucleotide Flanks Confer Transcriptional Competency To Bzip Core Motifs.”. Nucleic Acids Research, pp. 8371-8384.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Daniel M Cohen, Hee-Woong Lim, Kyoung-Jae Won, David J Steger
Abstract

Sequence-specific DNA binding recruits transcription factors (TFs) to the genome to regulate gene expression. Here, we perform high resolution mapping of CEBP proteins to determine how sequence dictates genomic occupancy. We demonstrate a fundamental difference between the sequence repertoire utilized by CEBPs in vivo versus the palindromic sequence preference reported by classical in vitro models, by identifying a palindromic motif at <1% of the genomic binding sites. On the native genome, CEBPs bind a diversity of related 10 bp sequences resulting from the fusion of degenerate and canonical half-sites. Altered DNA specificity of CEBPs in cells occurs through heterodimerization with other bZip TFs, and approximately 40% of CEBP-binding sites in primary human cells harbor motifs characteristic of CEBP heterodimers. In addition, we uncover an important role for sequence bias at core-motif-flanking bases for CEBPs and demonstrate that flanking bases regulate motif function across mammalian bZip TFs. Favorable flanking bases confer efficient TF occupancy and transcriptional activity, and DNA shape may explain how the flanks alter TF binding. Importantly, motif optimization within the 10-mer is strongly correlated with cell-type-independent recruitment of CEBPβ, providing key insight into how sequence sub-optimization affects genomic occupancy of widely expressed CEBPs across cell types.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nucleic acids research
Volume
46
Issue
16
Number of Pages
8371-8384
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1362-4962
DOI
10.1093/nar/gky681
Alternate Journal
Nucleic Acids Res.
PMID
30085281
PMCID
PMC6144830
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