The influence of transcription factor competition on the relationship between occupancy and affinity
Nicolae Radu Zabet, Robert Foy, Boris Adryan

TL;DR
This study explores how transcription factor competition influences the relationship between DNA binding affinity and actual occupancy, revealing that TF abundance and competition effects vary with site affinity and abundance levels.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how TF competition and abundance affect occupancy, especially highlighting differences across affinity levels and the role of molecular crowding.
Findings
TF competition minimally affects high-affinity sites at typical TF levels
Increased TF abundance raises occupancy at medium and low-affinity sites
Low-information PWM usage amplifies the impact of TF competition
Abstract
Transcription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to specific sites on the DNA and regulate gene activity. Identifying where TF molecules bind and how much time they spend on their target sites is key for understanding transcriptional regulation. It is usually assumed that the free energy of binding of a TF to the DNA (the affinity of the site) is highly correlated to the amount of time the TF remains bound (the occupancy of the site). However, knowing the binding energy is not sufficient to infer actual binding site occupancy. This mismatch between the occupancy predicted by the affinity and the observed occupancy may be caused by various factors, such as TF abundance, competition between TFs or the arrangement of the sites on the DNA. We investigated the relationship between the affinity of a TF for a set of binding sites and their occupancy. In particular, we considered the case of…
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