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Making enhancers from spare parts of the genome

Abstract

New studies show that novel long-range enhancers of developmental genes can emerge by exaptation of protein-coding sequences with no previous regulatory function.

Metazoan genomes contain tens of thousands of regions for which there has been recent experimental evidence for the binding of transcription factors and cofactors [1]. Many of these regions are conserved, sometimes through hundreds of millions of years of evolutionary history, as in the case of enhancers regulating early embryonic development [2]. There are numerous examples that show how new regulatory behavior can appear through modification of existing functional elements. At the same time, most known enhancers, including the most conserved ones, are unique sequences with no similarity to any of the elements that serve other functions, and there is increasing evidence showing that important functions are driven by regulatory elements that are poorly conserved, and showing a lineage-specific accelerated substitution rate in otherwise highly conserved elements. With this apparent dichotomy between turnover and conservation, it is legitimate to ask the question, 'Where and how do new enhancers come into existence?' Some enhancers have emerged from sequences that already had regulatory capacity; for example, duplication of single ancestral regulatory elements. Some others have come from mobile elements with the capacity to bind particular regulatory proteins that have integrated into regions in which nearby genes responded to them.

A new study by Eichenlaub and Ettwiller [3] investigated possible occurrences of an intriguing traceable scenario of de novo enhancer creation. By using a combination of comparative genomics and in vivo testing, the study identified sequences that had undergone an apparent shift (exaptation) from an exclusively coding function to an exclusively cis-regulatory function, allowing their origin to be traced over hundreds of millions of years of evolutionary history.

New enhancers recruited from duplicated protein-coding sequences

In principle, any of the sequences in a region from which a target gene is able to receive regulatory input could be exapted into a regulatory element, as long as it does not interfere with its other essential functions. Indeed, tens of thousands of elements overlapping coding exons in mammalian genomes have constrained selection on synonymous sites in their codons; Lin et al. [4] managed to assign putative function to 60% of them. The majority of functions, as expected, are splicing related, but other known overlapping functions have been detected: translational initiation, regulation of inclusion of cassette exons and, finally, developmental enhancers. The remaining 40% remain uncharacterized, but since they are enriched within developmental genes, a significant fraction of these are likely to have a regulatory role.

Eichenlaub and Ettwiller [3] explored an evolutionary scenario where an exonic remnant of a copy of a gene that was inactivated (non-functionalized) following teleost whole-genome duplication has acquired a regulatory function, as an enhancer driving part of the expression pattern of a neighboring developmental gene. They first searched for genomic regions in stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) that are (1) conserved between human and stickleback; (2) non-coding in stickleback, but whose human ortholog regions are in the coding sequence; (3) near developmental genes. They identified four such exon-turned-enhancers, which they termed recycled regions, in the stickleback genome. The four corresponding human exons belong to the non-developmental genes TTC29, DOCK9, CCDC46 and FAM44B.

The recycled regions annotated in the stickleback genome were transferred to the medaka genome for experimental validation. Three out of four recycled regions in the medaka genome showed enhancer activity, and each recapitulated part of the expression pattern of a neighboring developmental gene. The authors proceeded to show, for each of those sequences, that the medaka paralog, which is still a coding exon of an active protein-coding gene, does not have enhancer activity, and neither do the orthologous exons in mouse and elephant shark, which represent a sister group (tetrapods) and an outgroup (cartilaginous fish), respectively. From this experimental evidence, the authors concluded that the exaptation of new enhancers occurred after whole-genome duplication at the root of teleost fish radiation and after inactivation of the copy of the gene from which the recycled region originated.

The suggested scenario poses some constraints. If the inactivation of the protein-coding gene preceded exaptation, the exaptation should have followed quickly thereafter. Otherwise, the exon sequence conservation would have rapidly decayed beyond recognition by neutral mutation within a relatively narrow window of several million years (Figure 1a). This would make this scenario rare, but not implausible. Indeed, the fact that only four elements were found (three of them in which the exonic remnant itself is required for enhancer function) suggests that this is a rare event.

Figure 1
figure 1

Four alternative scenarios for the timing of exaptation of a coding sequence into a regulatory function exclusive to teleost fish. After whole-genome duplication (WGD; gray and red circles) in teleost fish (teleost), one copy of an ancestral coding sequence lost its coding function (gray branches). (a) The sequence was exapted into a regulatory function (red branches) within a window (t) of approximately 12.7 million years after non-functionalization, before significant sequence identity was lost as a result of neutral changes. (b) Exaptation was initiated after WGD, but before loss of coding function. Thus the sequence had a dual function for some time. (c) The regulatory function was acquired on top of the coding function before WGD, followed by differential loss of the two functions in the two sequence copies. (d) The exaptation took place earlier in evolution, and was followed by multiple losses: in one sequence copy following WGD in teleosts, and another on the mammalian (mouse) branch. The sequence identity has been retained due to selection on the new regulatory function (in one teleost copy), or on the coding function in the other teleost copy, in mammals and in elephant shark (shark).

The presented data do not exclude modified or alternative scenarios. For example, the exons could have been co-opted for an enhancer role before the whole-genome duplication (Figure 1b), yielding a dual-function element (enhancer overlapping a functional coding exon) of the kind that has been shown in several other instances [5]. Co-option, in which an additional function is acquired by an existing functional element, could have been followed by the reciprocal loss of enhancer or exon function after the whole-genome duplication [6]. This scenario still fits with the enhancer as newly emerged and teleost specific, but might have the benefit of a significantly longer 'window of opportunity' for emergence without much sequence divergence, because at no time is selective pressure on the element removed.

A slight modification of the scenario depicted in Figure 1b would be that the co-option occurred in the post-whole-genome-duplication period while both copies of the original protein-coding gene were still functional (Figure 1c). Judging from rediploidization events in zebrafish relative to three other teleosts (medaka, stickleback and tetraodon), the post-whole-genome-duplication window of opportunity was also likely to be longer than that prior to whole-genome duplication, although one would assume that selective pressure to retain two copies of the gene was low. Other, more elaborate scenarios, such as that depicted in Figure 1d, would benefit from even longer windows of opportunity, and will only be possible to exclude after additional fish genome sequences become available.

One of the three elements tested by Eichenlaub and Ettwiller [3], the one originating from an exon of ccdc46, is shown by the authors to be near a developmental enhancer that is conserved and functional in mouse, medaka and shark. The ccdc46 exon sequence from either mouse or elephant shark does not drive expression on its own in their assays, and is not required for the function of the neighboring enhancer in mouse. However, based on analysis of synonymous conservation across coding exons of 29 eutherian mammals [4], the ccdc46 exon itself overlaps with an element predicted to be still under selection on synonymous sites in eutherian mammals, and bears histone modifications associated with enhancer function (H3K4me1) in a subset of ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements) cell lines (Figure 2). This indicates that a complex scenario and a contemporary dual role for the exon in mammals cannot be ruled out.

Figure 2
figure 2

The AXIN2-CCDC46 locus. The human ortholog of an exon that was exapted into a regulatory function in teleosts is shown in the context of synonymous constraint elements (SCE), ENCODE histone marks in human embryonic stem cells indicative of enhancer function and promoter function (H3K4me1), and highly conserved elements (HCNEs) ≥50 bp from the following pair-wise comparisons: mouse, opossum and chicken (≥95% identity, black bars); stickleback, medaka, zebrafish and tetraodon (≥70% identity, gray bars; ≥80% identity, black bars). The human versus mouse HNCE density curves were calculated as the number of bases in HCNEs in sliding windows of 150 kb, and colored yellow, orange and red (≥95%, ≥98% and 100% identity, respectively). The co-ordinates are for the human genome (hg18). bp, base pair; chr, chromosome; kb, kilobase.

Turnover and exaptation of enhancers around developmental genes

A key question raised in Eichenlaub and Ettwiller [3] concerns the rate of enhancer turnover and how easy it is to recruit new ones from sequences with no function or another, unrelated function.

Recent work has explored dual-function (coding exon + enhancer) elements [5], and their possible separation by reciprocal loss of the two functions after whole-genome duplication [6]. In each case, the coding exon-turned-enhancer is just one of a multitude of enhancers spanning a broad, often megabase-sized, region from which a target gene is able to receive its regulatory inputs. Such arrangements of elements are frequent around genes encoding key developmental regulators in Metazoa and have been described as genomic regulatory blocks [2].

The four genes (TTC29, DOCK9, CCDC46 AND FAM44B) whose exonic remnants were exapted into enhancers show non-developmental expression patterns [3]. However, the neighboring target genes of these enhancers (POU4F2 (BNB1), ZIC2/ZIC5, AXIN2 and NKX2.5, respectively) are all target genes in genomic regulatory blocks, as evident from their biological function as developmental regulators, and from the distribution of a multitude of highly conserved elements around them (see Figure 2 for the AXIN2 example). The number of recognizable conserved elements around these genes falls with increasing evolutionary distance, as would be expected with turnover of regulatory sequences. If we extend the comparison to more distant species, the corresponding orthologous genes in Drosophila (acj6, opa, axn and tin, respectively) do not have any non-coding elements similar to these at the sequence level, but are instead spanned by their own sets of conserved elements/putative enhancers that can be aligned across drosophilids, but not vertebrate genomes. This means that, while the general regulatory architecture around those genes is similar, their regulatory element turnover since divergence from a common ancestor has been complete, at least in terms of sequence identity (discussed in [7]).

In addition, genomic regulatory blocks in mammals contain thousands of ancient mobile elements that have come under selective pressure [8], and numerous short elements enriched for histone modifications and transcriptional cofactors associated with enhancer functions spanning large regions around their target genes [9]. The conservation across vertebrates of the ccdc46 exon and its nearby enhancer might also imply the importance of existing proximal regulatory elements in guiding the de novo genesis of new ones. The conservation pattern, the slow but steady turnover over long evolutionary times, and the recruitment of numerous elements of recognizable non-regulatory origin all indicate a high susceptibility of sequences within genomic regulatory blocks to recruitment into a regulatory role.

Relevance and open questions

Eichenlaub and Ettwiller [3] showed how existing functional elements can be recycled for other functions, namely into developmental enhancers. Alongside transcription of non-coding RNAs from regions containing evidence of different past function, the recruitment of sequences around developmental genes into their enhancer repertoire seems to be the most common and most readily detectable way to reuse an existing genomic sequence. The widespread occurrence of such events could be one of the major mechanisms of evolutionary innovation in Metazoa.

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Acknowledgements

BL acknowledges support from the Bergen Research Foundation (BFS), YFF project 180435 from the Norwegian Research Foundation (NFR), and the Medical Research Council, UK.

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Correspondence to Boris Lenhard.

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Fredman, D., Dong, X. & Lenhard, B. Making enhancers from spare parts of the genome. Genome Biol 12, 138 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2011-12-12-138

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