Understanding genomes, piece by piece

Gene expression is influenced by neighbouring transcriptional patterns. Genetic rearrangements in a synthetic yeast chromosome revealed that characteristics of a gene's new transcriptional neighbourhood predicted its transcript isoform boundaries and abundance.
Credit: Tobias Wüstefeld

Genomes are made up of thousands of individual pieces – genes – which are expressed at different levels. Researchers at EMBL have shed light on how the placement of a gene affects its expression, as well as that of its neighbours.

The celebrated physicist Richard Feynman is credited with the quote, “What I cannot create, I do not understand.” As well as informing Feynman’s approach to theoretical physics, it’s a good way of describing the motivations of synthetic biologists, with their interest in building genomes from scratch. By designing and building synthetic genomes, they hope to better understand the code of life. Synthetic biology has been organised around the concept of using DNA sequences as ‘parts’ with reproducible functions. Now, through successful collaborations and the use of cutting-edge tools, EMBL’s Steinmetz Group has gained an important insight into the variation of gene expression that results from the position or context of these DNA parts within the genome.

Explaining the underlying question motivating the work, Amanda Hughes co-lead author and postdoc in the Steinmetz Group said, “In synthetic biology, you tend to break things down into modular, ‘plug-and-play’ parts. These are promotor parts, coding regions, and terminator parts. We wanted to test whether these pieces really are ‘plug-and-play,’ functioning the same way in any context, or whether their position affects their function. We wanted to better understand how the linear organisation of genes affects their functions and identify general design principles that could be applied to building genomes.”

A synthetic biology toolbox delivers contextual insights

This work, funded by BMBF and Volkswagen Foundation’s “Life?” initiative, was possible because of two key technologies: synthetic yeast strains from the Sc2.0 consortium and long-read direct RNA sequencing. The strains obtained from the Sc2.0 consortium included a design feature called ‘SCRaMbLE’ that provides the ability to rearrange genes into different locations at a previously unachievable scale. The expertise and tools available in the Genomics Core facility at EMBL, including Oxford Nanopore’s GridION, allowed the team to perform long-read direct RNA sequencing, permitting identification of both the start and end of RNA molecules and their assignment to particular rearrangements. The combination of these cutting-edge technologies was critical to measure full-length RNA molecules from genes across many contexts.

The paper, published in Science showed that context – and in particular transcriptional context – alters the RNA output of a gene. Using long-read direct RNA sequencing, they were able to observe changes in the start, end, and amount of full-length RNA molecules expressed from DNA sequences that had been randomly rearranged in synthetic yeast genomes. Relocating a gene affected the length and abundance of its RNA output; however, these changes were not always explained by the new adjacent DNA sequence. It appeared to be transcription occurring around it, rather than the sequence itself, that altered a gene’s RNA output.

Gleaning general principles from such a large, stochastic dataset was not a trivial task, as the lead author Aaron Brooks explained: “To reach our conclusions, we had to observe genes in many alternative genetic contexts, which were present in the SCRaMbLE strains. Putting the pieces back together, however, was a big effort. We had to generate a massive sequencing dataset, which, in turn, required us to develop new software tools. We had to rely on sophisticated machine learning algorithms to help us understand the complex patterns we were observing.” Modelling a gene’s RNA output based on its new upstream and downstream contexts revealed that features related to surrounding transcriptional patterns predicted RNA boundaries and abundance. For example, if a gene was relocated next to a highly expressed neighbour, its expression also tended to increase.

Defining design principles for building genomes

In addition to illuminating the relationship between RNA abundance and neighbouring gene expression, the researchers also noted a compelling relationship between the end positions of RNAs of convergent genes (genes oriented with ends towards one another). Specifically, they found that the length of an RNA was affected by the proximity and abundance of neighbouring transcripts. Jef Boeke, co-author and Director of the Sc2.0 consortium remarked on these insights: “Deep transcriptional profiling combined with the genomic variations produced using [the] SCRaMbLE system have given us new insights into the flexibility of the yeast genome and pointed out that the rules of where transcripts end can be surprisingly context dependent.”

Ultimately, applying these findings, the researchers were able tune the length of RNA molecules by controlling transcription of a neighbouring gene. The team demonstrated that the lessons learned from studying the transcriptomes of SCRaMbLEd genomes can be applied to engineer genomes with desired functions. The study also proposes a new synthetic biology design concept that the researchers term ‘transcriptional embedding’ that could be used to reversibly tag an RNA, altering its stability, translation into protein, or even localisation. All of this could be accomplished, they believe, by controlling the expression of a convergent, neighbouring gene rather than the gene itself.

“The unbiased and high-throughput nature of the gene reshuffling approach used here leads us to discover functions of genomic sequences in different genomic contexts, something that previously was not possible at scale,” said Lars Steinmetz, group leader at EMBL. “This approach emphasises that context matters in regulating transcript ends – surprisingly, even permitting context-dependent predictions of transcript ends when genes are reshuffled to new locations. Ultimately, the work reveals that there is fine-tuned interlinked regulation between neighbouring genetic elements, spanning multiple genes that determines where transcripts start and stop. The ability to predict these interactions can inform key ‘design principles’ for genome construction; i.e. where are genes best located and how should they be positioned relative to each other. These insights advance tools for engineering transcripts without changing the sequence itself but by modulating neighbouring gene expression.” Their work adds to a growing repertoire of design principles that can be leveraged to realise a grand vision in synthetic biology: designing and building a genome from scratch.

Journal: Science
DOI: 10.1126/science.abg0162
Article Title: Transcriptional neighborhoods regulate transcript isoform lengths and expression levels
Article Publication Date: 3-Mar-2022

Media Contact

Lisa Vollmar
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
lisa.vollmar@embl.org
Office: 15140088871

Media Contact

Lisa Vollmar
European Molecular Biology Laboratory

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