Farmiloe Grace, Lodewijk Gerrald A, Robben Stijn F, van Bree Elisabeth J, Jacobs Frank M J
Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, Amsterdam Neuroscience, University of Amsterdam, 1098XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2020 Mar 30;375(1795):20190333. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0333. Epub 2020 Feb 10.
The large family of KRAB zinc finger (KZNF) genes are transcription factors implicated in recognizing and repressing repetitive sequences such as transposable elements (TEs) in our genome. Through successive waves of retrotransposition-mediated insertions, various classes of TEs have invaded mammalian genomes at multiple timepoints throughout evolution. Even though most of the TE classes in our genome lost the capability to retrotranspose millions of years ago, it remains elusive why the KZNFs that evolved to repress them are still retained in our genome. One hypothesis is that KZNFs become repurposed for other regulatory roles. Here, we find evidence that evolutionary changes in KZNFs provide them not only with the ability to repress TEs, but also to bind to gene promoters independent of TEs. Using KZNF binding site data in conjunction with gene expression values from the Allen Brain Atlas, we show that KZNFs have the ability to regulate gene expression in the human brain in a region-specific manner. Our analysis shows that the expression of KZNFs shows correlation with the expression of their target genes, suggesting that KZNFs have a direct influence on gene expression in the developing human brain. The extent of this regulation and the impact it has on primate brain evolution are still to be determined, but our results imply that KZNFs have become widely integrated into neuronal gene regulatory networks. Our analysis predicts that gene expression networks have been repeatedly innovated throughout primate evolution, continuously gaining new layers of gene regulation mediated by both TEs and KZNFs in our genome. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Crossroads between transposons and gene regulation'.
KRAB锌指(KZNF)基因大家族是一类转录因子,参与识别和抑制基因组中的重复序列,如转座元件(TEs)。在整个进化过程中,通过逆转录转座介导的插入的连续浪潮,各类TEs在多个时间点侵入了哺乳动物基因组。尽管我们基因组中的大多数TEs类别在数百万年前就失去了逆转录转座的能力,但进化而来抑制它们的KZNFs为何仍保留在我们的基因组中,这一点仍然难以捉摸。一种假说是KZNFs被重新用于其他调控作用。在这里,我们发现证据表明,KZNFs的进化变化不仅赋予它们抑制TEs的能力,还使它们能够独立于TEs结合基因启动子。结合KZNF结合位点数据和来自艾伦脑图谱的基因表达值,我们表明KZNFs能够以区域特异性方式调节人类大脑中的基因表达。我们的分析表明,KZNFs的表达与其靶基因的表达相关,这表明KZNFs对发育中的人类大脑中的基因表达有直接影响。这种调控的程度及其对灵长类大脑进化的影响仍有待确定,但我们的结果表明KZNFs已广泛整合到神经元基因调控网络中。我们的分析预测,在整个灵长类进化过程中,基因表达网络不断创新,在我们的基因组中持续获得由TEs和KZNFs介导的新的基因调控层。本文是“转座子与基因调控的交叉点”讨论会议题的一部分。