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A tissue-specific self-interacting chromatin domain forms independently of enhancer-promoter interactions

Authors :
Christoffer Lagerholm
Sara De Ornellas
Nigel A. Roberts
Christian Babbs
Veronica J. Buckle
Bryony Graham
Jelena Telenius
Mira T. Kassouf
Jim R. Hughes
A. Marieke Oudelaar
Jill M. Brown
Douglas R. Higgs
Izabela Szczerbal
Dominic Waithe
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

A variety of self-interacting domains, defined at different levels of resolution, have been described in mammalian genomes. These include Chromatin Compartments (A and B)1, Topologically Associated Domains (TADs)2,3, contact domains4,5, sub-TADs6, insulated neighbourhoods7 and frequently interacting regions (FIREs)8. Whereas many studies have found the organisation of self-interacting domains to be conserved across cell types389, some do form in a lineage-specific manner6710. However, it is not clear to what degree such tissue-specific structures result from processes related to gene activity such as enhancer-promoter interactions or whether they form earlier during lineage commitment and are therefore likely to be prerequisite for promoting gene expression. To examine these models of genome organisation in detail, we used a combination of high-resolution chromosome conformation capture, a newly-developed form of quantitative fluorescence in-situ hybridisation and super-resolution imaging to study a 70 kb self-interacting domain containing the mouse α-globin locus. To understand how this self-interacting domain is established, we studied the region when the genes are inactive and during erythroid differentiation when the genes are progressively switched on. In contrast to many current models of long-range gene regulation, we show that an erythroid-specific, decompacted self-interacting domain, delimited by convergent CTCF/cohesin binding sites, forms prior to the onset of robust gene expression. Using previously established mouse models we show that formation of the self-interacting domain does not rely on interactions between the α-globin genes and their enhancers. As there are also no tissue-specific changes in CTCF binding, then formation of the domain may simply depend on the presence of activated lineage-specific cis-elements driving a transcription-independent mechanism for opening chromatin throughout the 70 kb region to create a permissive environment for gene expression. These findings are consistent with a model of loop-extrusion in which all segments of chromatin, within a region delimited by CTCF boundary elements, can contact each other. Our findings suggest that activation of tissue-specific element(s)within such a self-interacting region is sufficient to influence all chromatin within the domain.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6189d31e7d6dd6e7ea206943becc58ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/234427