Cis-Acting Regulatory Elements(CREs)[1]
Cis-Acting Regulatory Elements(CREs)[1]
Course Content:
• Regulation of Gene Expression :
1) Transcriptional level:-
Cis Acting Regulatory Factors
2) Translational level:-
• Translation in Eukaryotes.
• Post-translational Modifications.
• Gene rearrangement and Amplification.
cis-Acting Regulatory
Elements(CREs).
Dr. Muhammad Saleem
Protein Engineering Lab, School of Biological
Sciences, University of the Punjab, Lahore.
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Introduction
cis-acting;
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CREs are short DNA sequences found near genes, often in promoters
or enhancers, that control the timing, location, and level of gene
expression. They are recognized by transcription factors (proteins)
which can either activate or repress the transcription process.
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• In multicellular organisms, gene regulation enables different cell
types (e.g., muscle vs. nerve) to form from the same DNA.
• Proper regulation ensures normal growth and function.
• Cells need to adapt to their environment by turning certain genes
on or off.
Example: Bacteria like E. coli only produce enzymes to digest
lactose when lactose is present.
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cis-acting regulatory elements (CREs)
Some common cis-acting regulatory elements.
2. Enhancers
4. Insulators
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Location: Can be far from the gene (from 10³ to 10⁶ These are proteins
base pairs away). (not DNA) produced
Function: Enhancers help boost transcription by elsewhere in the
looping the DNA so that proteins bound here (like genome that bind to
transcription factors) can interact with the promoter cis elements (like
region. promoters or
enhancers).
Function: They help
activate or repress
Mediator gene transcription.
Complex
Function: Acts as
a bridge between
transcription
factors at the
enhancer and
RNA polymerase
at the promoter.
Helps assemble
the transcription Location: Just upstream (close) to the gene.
machinery at the Function: Contains core sequences (like the
gene's start site. TATA box) where RNA polymerase II and
transcription factors bind to initiate
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transcription.
eRNA (Enhancer RNA)
Definition: Short RNA molecules transcribed from enhancer regions.
Possible role: May help stabilize enhancer-promoter looping or recruit transcription machinery.
Promoters vs Other Regulatory
Elements
I. The promoter is the DNA sequence where the general
transcription factors and the polymerase assemble.
II. The regulatory sequences serve as binding sites for gene
regulatory proteins, whose presence on the DNA affects the
rate of transcription initiation.
Location; adjacent to the promoter, far upstream of it, or
even within introns or downstream of the gene
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Promoters
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Key Features of Promoters
1. Location:
1. Typically found upstream (before) the gene's coding region.
2. Some promoters are bidirectional (controlling two genes in opposite directions).
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Types of Promoters
1. Constitutive Promoters:
1.Always active, driving constant gene expression (e.g.,
housekeeping genes like GAPDH or ACTB).
2. Regulated Promoters:
1.Activated or repressed by specific signals (e.g., hormones,
stress, development).
2.Example: The lac operon promoter in bacteria responds to
lactose availability.
3. Inducible/Tissue-Specific Promoters:
1.Active only in certain tissues or conditions (e.g., the albumin
promoter in liver cells).
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Function of Promoters
1. Transcription Initiation:
1.Recruit RNA polymerase and transcription factors to form the pre-
initiation complex.
2.Determine the directionality of transcription.
2. Regulation of Gene Expression:
1.Strength of promoter sequences influences transcription rates
(weak vs. strong promoters).
2.Interactions with enhancers or silencers (distal regulatory
elements) fine- tune expression.
3. Epigenetic Control:
1.DNA methylation (e.g., at CpG islands) or histone
modifications (e.g., acetylation) can silence or activate
promoters.
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Classification of
Promoters
Three eukaryotic RNA polymerases have different structures
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In eukaryotes, RNA polymerase I (Pol I) specifically transcribes ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
precursor genes — typically the 45S pre-rRNA, which is later processed into 18S, 5.8S, and
28S rRNA.
i. Class I
Promoters
Class I Promoters are recognized by RNA polymerase I
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i. Class I
Promoters
Robert Tjian and colleagues identified the important regions of
the human class I promoter.
I. Core element; also known as the initiator (rINR), is located at
the start of transcription, between positions -45 and +20.
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ii. Class II
Promoters
The class II promoters recognized by RNA polymerase II (the
enzyme responsible for transcribing protein-coding genes in eukaryotes)
Parts
a. Core promoter
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ii. Class II
Promoters
a. Core promoter elements
I. The TATA box is centered at approximately position -28
(about -31 to -25); consensus sequence TATA(A/T)AA(G/A)
II. The TFIIB recognition element (BRE) lies just upstream of
the TATA box. Consists of elements lying within about -37 to -
32 bp of the transcription start site
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ii. Class II
Promoters
III. Initiator (Inr) is centered on the transcription start site (position -
6 to +45), consensus sequence PyPyAN(T/A)PyPy in mammals
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ii. Class II
Promoters
V. Motif ten element (MTE) positions +18 and +27.
VI. Downstream promoter element (DPE) positions +28 and +33.
Note; at least one of these elements is missing in most promoters
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ii. Class II
Promoters
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ii. Class II
Promoters
Initiator together
with the TATA box constitutes
core promoter
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ii. Class II
Promoters
In TATA-less promoters,
they compensate function
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ii. Class II
Promoters
Drive transcription
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ii. Class II
Promoters
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ii. Class II
Promoters
b. Proximal promoter elements (UPE)
Are usually found upstream of class II core promoters
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iii. Class III
Promoters
RNA polymerase III transcribes a variety of genes that encode
small RNAs, which includes,
I. The “classical” class III genes (types I and II), including the 5S
rRNA and tRNA genes, and the adenovirus VA RNA genes.
II. Some relatively recently discovered class III genes, including the
U6 snRNA gene, the 7SL RNA gene, the 7SK RNA gene, and
the Epstein–Barr virus EBER2 gene (non-classical)
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iii. Class III
Promoters
Classical” class III genes have promoters located internally.
Whereas the promoters recognized by polymerases I and II, as well
as by bacterial polymerases, are located mostly in the 5’-flanking
region.
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Class III promoters are recognized by RNA Polymerase III (Pol III), which
Promoter Transcription
Type Example Genes Key Elements
Location Factors
TFIIIA, TFIIIC,
Type I Internal 5S rRNA Box A, IE, Box
C TFIIIB
Type II Internal tRNA Box A, Box B TFIIIC, TFIIIB
External DSE, PSE, TATA SNAPc, TFIIIB
U6 snRNA, 7SK RNA
Type III
(upstream) box (with TBP)
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iii. Class III
Promoters
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How Transcription Starts from Internal Promoters
1. Promoter elements (Box A and Box B) are embedded within the coding sequence of the gene.
3.TFIIIC then recruits TFIIIB, which includes the TBP (TATA-binding protein) even though there's
no TATA box here.
1. TFIIIB binds upstream of the transcription start site (outside the gene body).
5. Transcription initiates just upstream of the gene, despite the promoter being internal.
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2.
Enhancers
Enhancers; are cis-acting DNA elements that stimulate
transcription
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2.
Enhancers
Enhancers + General transcription factors
Preinitiation complex
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2. Enhancers
(Example)
Different from promoters as they are Orientation- and
Position independent DNA elements.
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3.
Silencers
1. Repressor Binding:
1.Silencers contain binding sites for transcriptional repressors.
2.These repressors may block transcription factor binding, disrupt
enhancer function, or recruit chromatin modifiers.
2. Chromatin Modification:
1.Repressors often recruit histone deacetylases (HDACs),
histone methyltransferases, or co-repressor complexes.
2.This leads to heterochromatin formation, which is
transcriptionally silent.
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3.
Silencers
3. Competition or Interference:
Silencers can interfere with activators by blocking access to
the
promoter or by altering DNA looping dynamics
between enhancers and promoters.
4. Looping to Promoters:
Similar to enhancers, silencers can loop to promoters
to suppress transcription initiation directly.
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3.
Silencers
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4.
Insulators
Are specialized cis-regulatory DNA elements that act as genomic boundary markers.
Their main role is to regulate interactions between enhancers, promoters, and chromatin
domains, ensuring genes are expressed in the right place, at the right time, and at the
right level.
Are DNA sequences that prevent eukaryotic gene regulatory proteins from influence of
distant genes
(or) Insulators are DNA elements that can shield genes from activation by enhancers
(enhancer blocking activity) or repression by silencers (barrier activity).
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Prevent an Stop the spread of
enhancer from heterochromatin into
inappropriately 2. Barrier Activity active gene regions,
1. Enhancer-
activating a protecting genes from
Blocking
nearby promoter transcriptional silencing.
4. if placed between
them.
Insulators
1. Enhancer-Blocking Insulators:
1. Positioned between an enhancer and a promoter.
2. Prevent enhancers from inappropriately activating nearby genes.
3. Function by blocking DNA looping that brings enhancers to non-target
Function Description
promoters.
2. Barrier Insulators:
1. Located at the borders of heterochromatin domains.
2. Recruit chromatin modifiers or nucleosome remodeling complexes that maintain
open chromatin.
3. Prevent heterochromatin spread, protecting active genes from being silenced.
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4.
Insulators
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4.
Insulators
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