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Cooperativity and Rapid Evolution of Cobound Transcription Factors in Closely Related Mammals
Author(s) -
Klara Stefflova,
David Thybert,
Michael D. Wilson,
Ian Streeter,
J. Aleksić,
Panagiota Karagianni,
Alvis Brāzma,
David J. Adams,
Iannis Talianidis,
John C. Marioni,
Paul Flicek,
Duncan T. Odom
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2013.07.007
Subject(s) - biology , transcription factor , genetics , cooperativity , evolutionary biology , genome , gene , binding site , population , regulatory sequence , dna binding site , computational biology , gene expression , promoter , demography , sociology
To mechanistically characterize the microevolutionary processes active in altering transcription factor (TF) binding among closely related mammals, we compared the genome-wide binding of three tissue-specific TFs that control liver gene expression in six rodents. Despite an overall fast turnover of TF binding locations between species, we identified thousands of TF regions of highly constrained TF binding intensity. Although individual mutations in bound sequence motifs can influence TF binding, most binding differences occur in the absence of nearby sequence variations. Instead, combinatorial binding was found to be significant for genetic and evolutionary stability; cobound TFs tend to disappear in concert and were sensitive to genetic knockout of partner TFs. The large, qualitative differences in genomic regions bound between closely related mammals, when contrasted with the smaller, quantitative TF binding differences among Drosophila species, illustrate how genome structure and population genetics together shape regulatory evolution.

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