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lincRNAs act in the circuitry controlling pluripotency and differentiation

Authors :
Xiaoping Yang
Robert A. Ach
Manuel Garber
Aviv Regev
Eric S. Lander
Julie Donaghey
Jennifer K. Grenier
Mitchell Guttman
Alexander Meissner
John L. Rinn
Laurakay Bruhn
Geneva Young
Anne Bergstrom Lucas
Ido Amit
Bryce W. Carey
Glen Munson
David E. Root
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
Carey, Bryce W.
Lander, Eric S.
Guttman, Mitchell
Regev, Aviv
Source :
Nature, PMC
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Although thousands of large intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) have been identified in mammals, few have been functionally characterized, leading to debate about their biological role. To address this, we performed loss-of-function studies on most lincRNAs expressed in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells and characterized the effects on gene expression. Here we show that knockdown of lincRNAs has major consequences on gene expression patterns, comparable to knockdown of well-known ES cell regulators. Notably, lincRNAs primarily affect gene expression in trans. Knockdown of dozens of lincRNAs causes either exit from the pluripotent state or upregulation of lineage commitment programs. We integrate lincRNAs into the molecular circuitry of ES cells and show that lincRNA genes are regulated by key transcription factors and that lincRNA transcripts bind to multiple chromatin regulatory proteins to affect shared gene expression programs. Together, the results demonstrate that lincRNAs have key roles in the circuitry controlling ES cell state.<br />Broad Institute<br />Harvard University<br />National Human Genome Research Institute (U.S.)<br />Merkin Family Foundation for Stem Cell Research

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
477
Issue :
7364
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....553421fc778f4cf221a4bd9d5391c423