Developmental programs are driven by the transcription factors that convert signaling information into the precise patterns of gene expression needed for accurate cell fate transitions. Transcription factor-DNA and transcription factor-transcription factor interactions together produce the necessary regulatory dynamics and precision. Because of the greater complexity and heterogeneity of protein-protein interactions, the field has focused on manipulating DNA sequence to study the mechanisms that determine enhancer specificity and gene expression output. This proposal describes our plan to manipulate transcription factor protein-protein interaction affinity. The experimental plan takes advantage of the deep mechanistic understanding and well- validated in vitro and in vivo assays established over two decades of studying the function and regulation of the conserved ETS family repressor Yan in the developing Drosophila visual system.
Aim 1 outlines a multi- disciplinary strategy to engineer a set of yan alleles in which self-association affinity is gradually increased from weak to strong. Using these alleles, Aim 2 tests competing hypotheses for how protein-protein interaction affinity influences Yan function and target gene specificity during photoreceptor specification in the fly retina. Because the ideas we are testing address fundamental mechanisms of transcriptional and developmental regulation, the discoveries that emerge are likely to have impact well beyond our specific model system.

Public Health Relevance

The combination of unsurpassed genetic tractability, deep mechanistic understanding, and evolutionary conservation of the relevant signaling networks makes the Drosophila retina an ideal model system in which to study how transcription factors orchestrate the dynamic gene expression patterns that drive cell fate specification. Our approach is to manipulate a property fundamental to many transcription factors, namely the requirement to operate as dimers or higher order oligomers, and then assess the impact on the DNA-level interactions that ultimately produce the patterns of gene expression that direct photoreceptor fate specification. Because transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are broadly conserved and because correct regulation of gene expression is fundamental to all cellular processes, the insights that emerge from our study will improve understanding of many aspects of development and disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
5R21EY030199-02
Application #
9913544
Study Section
Biology of the Visual System Study Section (BVS)
Program Officer
Neuhold, Lisa
Project Start
2019-05-01
Project End
2021-04-30
Budget Start
2020-05-01
Budget End
2021-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Chicago
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005421136
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60637