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SRX17155287: GSM6482118: ZnT63C enhancer libraries rep1 input; Drosophila melanogaster; OTHER
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina NovaSeq 6000) run: 6.3M spots, 1.9G bases, 891.4Mb downloads

External Id: GSM6482118_r1
Submitted by: Stark Lab, Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP)
Study: Enhancers display sequence flexibility constrained by transcription factor motif syntax [Drosophila random variant STARR-seq]
show Abstracthide Abstract
The information about when and where each gene is to be expressed is mainly encoded in the DNA sequence of enhancers, sequence elements that comprise binding sites (motifs) for different transcription factors (TFs). Most of the research on enhancer sequences has been focused on TF motif presence, while the enhancer syntax, i.e. the flexibility of important motif positions and how the sequence context modulates the activity of TF motifs, remain poorly understood. Here, we explore the rules of enhancer syntax by a two-pronged approach in Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells: we (1) replace important motifs by an exhaustive set of all possible 65,536 eight-nucleotide-long random sequences and (2) paste eight important TF motif types into 763 motif positions within 496 enhancers. These complementary strategies reveal that enhancers display constrained sequence flexibility and the context-specific modulation of motif function. Important motifs can be functionally replaced by hundreds of sequences constituting several distinct motif types, but only a fraction of all possible sequences and motif types restore enhancer activity. Moreover, TF motifs contribute with different intrinsic strengths that are strongly modulated by the enhancer sequence context (the flanking sequence, presence and diversity of other motif types, and distance between motifs), such that not all motif types can work in all positions. Constrained sequence flexibility and the context-specific modulation of motif function are also hallmarks of human enhancers and TF motifs, as we demonstrate experimentally. Overall, these two general principles of enhancer sequences are important to understand and predict enhancer function during development, evolution and in disease. Overall design: UMI-STARR-seq was performed in S2 cells using a enhancer libraries where we replace important motifs by an exhaustive set of all possible 65,536 eight-nucleotide-long random sequences. All experiments were performed in 2 biological replicates.
Sample: ZnT63C enhancer libraries rep1 input
SAMN30413396 • SRS14727022 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: GSM6482118
Instrument: Illumina NovaSeq 6000
Strategy: OTHER
Source: GENOMIC
Selection: other
Layout: PAIRED
Construction protocol: 24h after electroporation, total RNA was extracted using the RNeasy Maxi kit (Qiagen; cat. no. 75162), followed by polyA+ RNA isolation using Invitrogen Dynabeads Oligo(dT)25 (scaling up the manufacturer's protocol accordingly; cat. no. 61005) and DNase treatment with Ambion Turbo DNase (cat. no. AM2239) at a concentration of at most 200 ng/µl for 30 minutes (min) at 37°C. The reactions were then subjected to Qiagen RNeasy MinElute reaction clean-up (cat. no. 74204), for Turbo DNase inactivation and RNA concentration. After reverse transcription and second strand synthesis a unique molecular identifier (UMI) was added to each transcript. This is followed by two nested PCR steps, each with primers that are specific to the reporter transcripts such that STARR-seq does not detect endogenous cellular RNAs. See Neumayr et al., Curr. Protoc. Mol. Biol. 2019. Random 8nt variant libraries were generated using a PCR approach with degenerate oligonucleotides. Forward primers were designed to anneal directly downstream of the enhancer position of interested followed by 8 degenerate bp (creating 65,536 variants) and another 20 bp complementary stretch. Reverse primers were complementary to the 20 bp 5' of the degenerate stretch. The STARR-seq vector containing the wildtype enhancer of interest (either ced-6 or ZnT63C) was used as a template for the PCR. The PCR was run across the whole STARR-seq plasmid, followed by DpnI digest and a Gibson reaction that re-circularizes the plasmid. Libraries were grown in 2l LB-Amp (final ampicillin concentration 100µg/mL). Variant libraries of the same enhancer i.e. ced-6 enhancer pos110, pos182, pos230, pos241 and ZnT63C enhancer pos142, pos180, pos210 were pooled to equimolar ratio, together with another synthetic oligo library containing wt enhancer sequences and negative regions. STARR-seq
Runs: 1 run, 6.3M spots, 1.9G bases, 891.4Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR211430936,315,0901.9G891.4Mb2022-12-15

ID:
23958285

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