Publication | Open Access
Long-Range Communication between the Silencers of <i>HMR</i>
65
Citations
55
References
2008
Year
Boundary Trap AssayEngineeringGeneticsGene Regulatory NetworkSir ProteinsCommunicationInterference CancellationTranscriptional RegulationAudio Signal ProcessingNoiseChromosome Conformation CaptureGene ExpressionCell BiologySignal ProcessingTranscription RegulationChromatin FunctionSpeech CommunicationChromatinLong-range CommunicationChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingGene RegulationSpeech ProcessingMedicine
Gene regulation involves long-range communication between silencers, enhancers, and promoters. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, silencers flank transcriptionally repressed genes to mediate regional silencing. Silencers recruit the Sir proteins, which then spread along chromatin to encompass the entire silenced domain. In this report we have employed a boundary trap assay, an enhancer activity assay, chromatin immunoprecipitations, and chromosome conformation capture analyses to demonstrate that the two HMR silencer elements are in close proximity and functionally communicate with one another in vivo. We further show that silencing is necessary for these long-range interactions, and we present models for Sir-mediated silencing based upon these results.
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