Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Noncooperative Interactions between Transcription Factors and Clustered DNA Binding Sites Enable Graded Transcriptional Responses to Environmental Inputs

2010; Elsevier BV; Volume: 37; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.molcel.2010.01.016

ISSN

1097-4164

Autores

Luca Giorgetti, Trevor Siggers, Guido Tiana, Greta Caprara, Samuele Notarbartolo, Teresa Corona, Manolis Pasparakis, Paolo Milani, Martha L. Bulyk, Gioacchino Natoli,

Tópico(s)

Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics

Resumo

Summary A paradigm in transcriptional regulation is that graded increases in transcription factor (TF) concentration are translated into on/off transcriptional responses by cooperative TF binding to adjacent sites. Digital transcriptional responses underlie the definition of anatomical boundaries during development. Here we show that NF-κB, a TF controlling inflammation and immunity, is conversely an analog transcriptional regulator that uses clustered binding sites noncooperatively. We observed that increasing concentrations of NF-κB are translated into gradual increments in gene transcription. We provide a thermodynamic interpretation of the experimental observations by combining quantitative measurements and a minimal physical model of an NF-κB-dependent promoter. We demonstrate that NF-κB binds independently to adjacent sites to promote additive RNA Pol II recruitment and graded transcriptional outputs. These findings reveal an alternative mode of operation of clustered TF binding sites, which might function in biological conditions where the transcriptional output is proportional to the strength of an environmental input.

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