Many genes are regulated by multiple enhancers that often simultaneously activate their target gene. Yet, how individual enhancers collaborate to activate transcription is not well understood. Here, we dissect the functions and interdependencies of five enhancer elements that form a previously identified enhancer cluster and activate the Fgf5 locus during exit from naïve murine pluripotency. Four elements are located downstream of the Fgf5 gene and form a super-enhancer. Each of these elements contributes to Fgf5 induction at a distinct time point of differentiation. The fifth element is located in the first intron of the Fgf5 gene and contributes to Fgf5 expression at every time point by amplifying overall Fgf5 expression levels. This amplifier element strongly accumulates paused RNA Polymerase II but does not give rise to a mature Fgf5 mRNA. By transplanting the amplifier to a different genomic position, we demonstrate that it enriches for high levels of paused RNA Polymerase II autonomously. Based on our data, we propose a model for a mechanism by which RNA Polymerase II accumulation at a novel type of enhancer element, the amplifier, contributes to enhancer collaboration..
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