TY - JOUR
T1 - A large permissive regulatory domain exclusively controls Tbx3 expression in the cardiac conduction system
AU - van Weerd, Jan Hendrik
AU - Badi, Ileana
AU - van den Boogaard, Malou
AU - Stefanovic, Sonia
AU - van de Werken, Harmen J G
AU - Gomez-Velazquez, Melisa
AU - Badia-Careaga, Claudio
AU - Manzanares, Miguel
AU - de Laat, Wouter
AU - Barnett, Phil
AU - Christoffels, Vincent M
N1 - © 2014 American Heart Association, Inc.
PY - 2014/8/1
Y1 - 2014/8/1
N2 - RATIONALE: The evolutionary conserved Tbx3/Tbx5 gene cluster encodes T-box transcription factors that play crucial roles in the development and homeostasis of the cardiac conduction system in human and mouse. Both genes are expressed in overlapping patterns and function in strictly tissue-specific and dose-dependent manners, yet, their regulation is poorly understood.OBJECTIVE: To analyze the mechanism underlying the complex regulation of the Tbx3/Tbx5 cluster.METHODS AND RESULTS: By probing the 3-dimensional architecture of the Tbx3/Tbx5 cluster using high-resolution circular chromosome conformation capture sequencing in vivo, we found that its regulatory landscape is in a preformed conformation similar in embryonic heart, limbs, and brain. Tbx3 and its flanking gene desert form a 1 Mbp loop between CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)-binding sites that is separated from the neighboring Tbx5 loop. However, Ctcf inactivation did not result in transcriptional regulatory interaction between Tbx3 and Tbx5. Multiple sites within the Tbx3 locus contact the promoter, including sites corresponding to regions known to contain variations in the human genome influencing conduction. We identified an atrioventricular-specific enhancer and a pan-cardiac enhancer that contact the promoter and each other and synergize to activate transcription in the atrioventricular conduction system.CONCLUSIONS: We provide a high-resolution model of the 3-dimensional structure and function of the Tbx3/Tbx5 locus and show that the locus is organized in a preformed, permissive structure. The Tbx3 locus forms a CTCF-independent autonomous regulatory domain with multiple combinatorial regulatory elements that control the precise pattern of Tbx3 in the cardiac conduction system.
AB - RATIONALE: The evolutionary conserved Tbx3/Tbx5 gene cluster encodes T-box transcription factors that play crucial roles in the development and homeostasis of the cardiac conduction system in human and mouse. Both genes are expressed in overlapping patterns and function in strictly tissue-specific and dose-dependent manners, yet, their regulation is poorly understood.OBJECTIVE: To analyze the mechanism underlying the complex regulation of the Tbx3/Tbx5 cluster.METHODS AND RESULTS: By probing the 3-dimensional architecture of the Tbx3/Tbx5 cluster using high-resolution circular chromosome conformation capture sequencing in vivo, we found that its regulatory landscape is in a preformed conformation similar in embryonic heart, limbs, and brain. Tbx3 and its flanking gene desert form a 1 Mbp loop between CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)-binding sites that is separated from the neighboring Tbx5 loop. However, Ctcf inactivation did not result in transcriptional regulatory interaction between Tbx3 and Tbx5. Multiple sites within the Tbx3 locus contact the promoter, including sites corresponding to regions known to contain variations in the human genome influencing conduction. We identified an atrioventricular-specific enhancer and a pan-cardiac enhancer that contact the promoter and each other and synergize to activate transcription in the atrioventricular conduction system.CONCLUSIONS: We provide a high-resolution model of the 3-dimensional structure and function of the Tbx3/Tbx5 locus and show that the locus is organized in a preformed, permissive structure. The Tbx3 locus forms a CTCF-independent autonomous regulatory domain with multiple combinatorial regulatory elements that control the precise pattern of Tbx3 in the cardiac conduction system.
U2 - 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.303591
DO - 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.303591
M3 - Article
C2 - 24963028
SN - 0009-7330
VL - 115
SP - 432
EP - 441
JO - Circulation Research
JF - Circulation Research
IS - 4
ER -