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    Date Issued2021 (1)2017 (1)Author
    Creamer, Kevin (2)
    Lawrence, Jeanne B. (2)Kolpa, Heather J. (1)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Neurology (2)Lawrence Lab (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Keywordnuclear matrix (2)nuclear scaffold (2)SAF-A (2)XIST (2)Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (1)View MoreJournalMolecular cell (1)Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences (1)

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    Nascent RNA scaffolds contribute to chromosome territory architecture and counter chromatin compaction

    Creamer, Kevin; Kolpa, Heather J.; Lawrence, Jeanne B. (2021-09-02)
    Nuclear chromosomes transcribe far more RNA than required to encode protein. Here we investigate whether non-coding RNA broadly contributes to cytological-scale chromosome territory architecture. We develop a procedure that depletes soluble proteins, chromatin, and most nuclear RNA from the nucleus but does not delocalize XIST, a known architectural RNA, from an insoluble chromosome "scaffold." RNA-seq analysis reveals that most RNA in the nuclear scaffold is repeat-rich, non-coding, and derived predominantly from introns of nascent transcripts. Insoluble, repeat-rich (C0T-1) RNA co-distributes with known scaffold proteins including scaffold attachment factor A (SAF-A), and distribution of these components inversely correlates with chromatin compaction in normal and experimentally manipulated nuclei. We further show that RNA is required for SAF-A to interact with chromatin and for enrichment of structurally embedded "scaffold attachment regions" prevalent in euchromatin. Collectively, the results indicate that long nascent transcripts contribute a dynamic structural role that promotes the open architecture of active chromosome territories.
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    XIST RNA: a window into the broader role of RNA in nuclear chromosome architecture

    Creamer, Kevin; Lawrence, Jeanne B. (2017-11-05)
    XIST RNA triggers the transformation of an active X chromosome into a condensed, inactive Barr body and therefore provides a unique window into transitions of higher-order chromosome architecture. Despite recent progress, how XIST RNA localizes and interacts with the X chromosome remains poorly understood. Genetic engineering of XIST into a trisomic autosome demonstrates remarkable capacity of XIST RNA to localize and comprehensively silence that autosome. Thus, XIST does not require X chromosome-specific sequences but operates on mechanisms available genome-wide. Prior results suggested XIST localization is controlled by attachment to the insoluble nuclear scaffold. Our recent work affirms that scaffold attachment factor A (SAF-A) is involved in anchoring XIST, but argues against the view that SAF-A provides a unimolecular bridge between RNA and the chromosome. Rather, we suggest that a complex meshwork of architectural proteins interact with XIST RNA. Parallel work studying the territory of actively transcribed chromosomes suggests that repeat-rich RNA 'coats' euchromatin and may impact chromosome architecture in a manner opposite of XIST A model is discussed whereby RNA may not just recruit histone modifications, but more directly impact higher-order chromatin condensation via interaction with architectural proteins of the nucleus.This article is part of the themed issue 'X-chromosome inactivation: a tribute to Mary Lyon'.
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