Developmental gene expression is often controlled by distal regulatory DNA elements called enhancers. Distant enhancer action is restricted to structural chromosomal domains that are flanked by CTCF-associated boundaries and formed through cohesin chromatin loop extrusion. To better understand how enhancers, genes and CTCF boundaries together form structural domains and control expression, we used a bottom-up approach, building series of active regulatory landscapes in inactive chromatin. We demonstrate here that gene transcription levels and activity over time reduce with increased enhancer distance. The enhancer recruits cohesin to stimulate domain formation and engage flanking CTCF sites in loop formation. It requires cohesin exclusively for the activation of distant genes, not of proximal genes, with nearby CTCF boundaries supporting efficient long-range enhancer action. Our work supports a dual activity model for enhancers: its classic role of stimulating transcription initiation and elongation from target gene promoters and a role of recruiting cohesin for the creation of chromosomal domains, the engagement of CTCF sites in chromatin looping and the activation of distal target genes.
Developmental gene expression is often controlled by distal tissue-specific enhancers. Enhancer action is restricted to topological chromatin domains, typically formed by cohesin-mediated loop extrusion between CTCF-associated boundaries. To better understand how individual regulatory DNA elements form topological domains and control expression, we used a bottom-up approach, building active regulatory landscapes of different sizes in inactive chromatin. We demonstrate that transcriptional output and protection against gene silencing reduces with increased enhancer distance, but that enhancer contact frequencies alone do not dictate transcription activity. The enhancer recruits cohesin to stimulate the formation of local chromatin contact domains and activate flanking CTCF sites for engagement in chromatin looping. Small contact domains can support strong and stable expression of distant genes. The enhancer requires transcription factors and mediator to activate genes over all distance ranges, but relies on cohesin exclusively for the activation of distant genes. Our work supports a model that assigns two functions to enhancers: its classic role to stimulate transcription initiation and elongation from target gene promoters and a role to recruit cohesin for the creation of contact domains, the engagement of flanking CTCF sites in chromatin looping, and the activation of distal target genes.
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