Transposable Element Exaptation into Regulatory Regions Is Rare, Influenced by Evolutionary Age, and Subject to Pleiotropic Constraints

Corinne N Simonti, Mihaela Pavlicev, John A Capra

    Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

    Abstract

    Transposable element (TE)-derived sequences make up approximately half of most mammalian genomes, and many TEs have been co-opted into gene regulatory elements. However, we lack a comprehensive tissue- and genome-wide understanding of how and when TEs gain regulatory activity in their hosts. We evaluated the prevalence of TE-derived DNA in enhancers and promoters across hundreds of human and mouse cell lines and primary tissues. Promoters are significantly depleted of TEs in all tissues compared with their overall prevalence in the genome (P < 0.001); enhancers are also depleted of TEs, though not as strongly as promoters. The degree of enhancer depletion also varies across contexts (1.5-3×), with reproductive and immune cells showing the highest levels of TE regulatory activity in humans. Overall, in spite of the regulatory potential of many TE sequences, they are significantly less active in gene regulation than expected from their prevalence. TE age is predictive of the likelihood of enhancer activity; TEs originating before the divergence of amniotes are 9.2 times more likely to have enhancer activity than TEs that integrated in great apes. Context-specific enhancers are more likely to be TE-derived than enhancers active in multiple tissues, and young TEs are more likely to overlap context-specific enhancers than old TEs (86% vs. 47%). Once TEs obtain enhancer activity in the host, they have similar functional dynamics to one another and non-TE-derived enhancers, likely driven by pleiotropic constraints. However, a few TE families, most notably endogenous retroviruses, have greater regulatory potential. Our observations suggest a model of regulatory co-option in which TE-derived sequences are initially repressed, after which a small fraction obtains context-specific enhancer activity, with further gains subject to pleiotropic constraints.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2856-2869
    Number of pages14
    JournalMolecular Biology and Evolution
    Volume34
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2017

    Austrian Fields of Science 2012

    • 106012 Evolutionary research

    Keywords

    • Animals
    • Biological Evolution
    • DNA Transposable Elements/genetics
    • Gene Expression Regulation/genetics
    • Genetic Pleiotropy/genetics
    • Humans
    • Mice
    • Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics
    • Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics
    • Gene regulation
    • Pleiotropy
    • Evolution
    • Transposable elements

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