Control of Cell Identity Genes Occurs in Insulated Neighborhoods in Mammalian Chromosomes
Author(s)
Dowen, Jill M.; Fan, Zi Peng; Hnisz, Denes; Ren, Gang; Abraham, Brian J.; Weintraub, Abraham S.; Schuijers, Jurian; Lee, Tong Ihn; Zhao, Keji; Zhang, Lyndon Nuoxi; Young, Richard A.; ... Show more Show less
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The pluripotent state of embryonic stem cells (ESCs) is produced by active transcription of genes that control cell identity and repression of genes encoding lineage-specifying developmental regulators. Here, we use ESC cohesin ChIA-PET data to identify the local chromosomal structures at both active and repressed genes across the genome. The results produce a map of enhancer-promoter interactions and reveal that super-enhancer-driven genes generally occur within chromosome structures that are formed by the looping of two interacting CTCF sites co-occupied by cohesin. These looped structures form insulated neighborhoods whose integrity is important for proper expression of local genes. We also find that repressed genes encoding lineage-specifying developmental regulators occur within insulated neighborhoods. These results provide insights into the relationship between transcriptional control of cell identity genes and control of local chromosome structure.
Date issued
2014-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology; Whitehead Institute for Biomedical ResearchJournal
Cell
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Dowen, Jill M. et al. “Control of Cell Identity Genes Occurs in Insulated Neighborhoods in Mammalian Chromosomes.” Cell 159.2 (2014): 374–387.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0092-8674
1097-4172