Dynamic evolution of precise regulatory encodings creates the clustered signature of developmental enhancers
Albert Erives, Justin Crocker

TL;DR
This study reveals how the precise spacer length between Dorsal and Twist binding sites determines enhancer threshold responses, with evolutionary dynamics shaping the clustered regulatory signatures in Drosophila genomes.
Contribution
It uncovers the functional range of spacer elements, the prevalence of non-functional sites, and the evolutionary process of encoding replacement in developmental enhancers.
Findings
Spacer length determines threshold response.
Most clustered sites are non-functional divergent elements.
Evolution involves frequent replacement of threshold-encoding elements.
Abstract
A morphogenic protein known as Dorsal patterns the embryonic dorsoventral body axis of Drosophila by binding to transcriptional enhancers across the genome. Each such enhancer activates a neighboring gene at a unique threshold concentration of Dorsal. The presence of Dorsal binding site clusters in these enhancers and of similar clusters in other enhancers has motivated models of threshold-encoding in site density. However, we found that the precise length of a spacer separating a pair of specialized Dorsal and Twist binding sites determines the threshold-response. Despite this result, the functional range determined by this spacer element as well as the role and origin of its surrounding Dorsal site cluster remained completely unknown. Here, we experiment with enhancers from diverse Drosophila genomes, including the large uncompacted genomes from ananassae and willistoni, and report…
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