Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

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Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters. / Bendtsen, Kristian Moss; Erdossy, Janos; Csiszovski, Zsolt; Svenningsen, Sine Lo; Sneppen, Kim; Krishna, Sandeep; Semsey, Szabolcs.

In: Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 39, No. 16, 2011, p. 6879-6885.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bendtsen, KM, Erdossy, J, Csiszovski, Z, Svenningsen, SL, Sneppen, K, Krishna, S & Semsey, S 2011, 'Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters', Nucleic Acids Research, vol. 39, no. 16, pp. 6879-6885. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkr390

APA

Bendtsen, K. M., Erdossy, J., Csiszovski, Z., Svenningsen, S. L., Sneppen, K., Krishna, S., & Semsey, S. (2011). Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters. Nucleic Acids Research, 39(16), 6879-6885. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkr390

Vancouver

Bendtsen KM, Erdossy J, Csiszovski Z, Svenningsen SL, Sneppen K, Krishna S et al. Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters. Nucleic Acids Research. 2011;39(16):6879-6885. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkr390

Author

Bendtsen, Kristian Moss ; Erdossy, Janos ; Csiszovski, Zsolt ; Svenningsen, Sine Lo ; Sneppen, Kim ; Krishna, Sandeep ; Semsey, Szabolcs. / Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters. In: Nucleic Acids Research. 2011 ; Vol. 39, No. 16. pp. 6879-6885.

Bibtex

@article{0304fcda758b4db596c44bc395644ce7,
title = "Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters",
abstract = "Optimal response to environmental stimuli often requires activation of certain genes and repression of others. Dual function regulatory proteins play a key role in the differential regulation of gene expression. While repression can be achieved by any DNA binding protein through steric occlusion of RNA polymerase in the promoter region, activation often requires a surface on the regulatory protein to contact RNAP and thus facilitate transcription initiation. RNAP itself is also a DNA binding protein, therefore it can function as a transcriptional repressor. Searching the Escherichia coli promoter database we found that ~14% of the identified 'forward' promoters overlap with a promoter oriented in the opposite direction. In this article we combine a mathematical model with experimental analysis of synthetic regulatory regions to investigate interference of overlapping promoters. We find that promoter interference depends on the characteristics of overlapping promoters. The model predicts that promoter strength and interference can be regulated separately, which provides unique opportunities for regulation. Our experimental data suggest that in principle any DNA binding protein can be used for both activation and repression of promoter transcription, depending on the context. These findings can be exploited in the construction of synthetic networks.",
author = "Bendtsen, {Kristian Moss} and Janos Erdossy and Zsolt Csiszovski and Svenningsen, {Sine Lo} and Kim Sneppen and Sandeep Krishna and Szabolcs Semsey",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1093/nar/gkr390",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "6879--6885",
journal = "Nucleic Acids Research",
issn = "0305-1048",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Direct and indirect effects in the regulation of overlapping promoters

AU - Bendtsen, Kristian Moss

AU - Erdossy, Janos

AU - Csiszovski, Zsolt

AU - Svenningsen, Sine Lo

AU - Sneppen, Kim

AU - Krishna, Sandeep

AU - Semsey, Szabolcs

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Optimal response to environmental stimuli often requires activation of certain genes and repression of others. Dual function regulatory proteins play a key role in the differential regulation of gene expression. While repression can be achieved by any DNA binding protein through steric occlusion of RNA polymerase in the promoter region, activation often requires a surface on the regulatory protein to contact RNAP and thus facilitate transcription initiation. RNAP itself is also a DNA binding protein, therefore it can function as a transcriptional repressor. Searching the Escherichia coli promoter database we found that ~14% of the identified 'forward' promoters overlap with a promoter oriented in the opposite direction. In this article we combine a mathematical model with experimental analysis of synthetic regulatory regions to investigate interference of overlapping promoters. We find that promoter interference depends on the characteristics of overlapping promoters. The model predicts that promoter strength and interference can be regulated separately, which provides unique opportunities for regulation. Our experimental data suggest that in principle any DNA binding protein can be used for both activation and repression of promoter transcription, depending on the context. These findings can be exploited in the construction of synthetic networks.

AB - Optimal response to environmental stimuli often requires activation of certain genes and repression of others. Dual function regulatory proteins play a key role in the differential regulation of gene expression. While repression can be achieved by any DNA binding protein through steric occlusion of RNA polymerase in the promoter region, activation often requires a surface on the regulatory protein to contact RNAP and thus facilitate transcription initiation. RNAP itself is also a DNA binding protein, therefore it can function as a transcriptional repressor. Searching the Escherichia coli promoter database we found that ~14% of the identified 'forward' promoters overlap with a promoter oriented in the opposite direction. In this article we combine a mathematical model with experimental analysis of synthetic regulatory regions to investigate interference of overlapping promoters. We find that promoter interference depends on the characteristics of overlapping promoters. The model predicts that promoter strength and interference can be regulated separately, which provides unique opportunities for regulation. Our experimental data suggest that in principle any DNA binding protein can be used for both activation and repression of promoter transcription, depending on the context. These findings can be exploited in the construction of synthetic networks.

U2 - 10.1093/nar/gkr390

DO - 10.1093/nar/gkr390

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21609952

VL - 39

SP - 6879

EP - 6885

JO - Nucleic Acids Research

JF - Nucleic Acids Research

SN - 0305-1048

IS - 16

ER -

ID: 33762478