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    Date Issued2017 (2)2014 (1)2013 (1)2012 (2)AuthorDekker, Job (6)
    Nora, Elphege P. (6)
    Heard, Edith (4)Giorgetti, Luca (3)Abdennur, Nezar (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationProgram in Systems Biology (6)Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (4)Program in Gene Function and Expression (1)Document TypeJournal Article (5)Preprint (1)KeywordSystems Biology (5)Molecular Biology (3)Structural Biology (3)Computational Biology (2)Genetics and Genomics (2)View MoreJournalCell (2)BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (1)Bioinformatics (Oxford, England) (1)bioRxiv (1)Nature (1)

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    Targeted Degradation of CTCF Decouples Local Insulation of Chromosome Domains from Genomic Compartmentalization

    Nora, Elphege P.; Goloborodko, Anton; Valton, Anne-Laure; Gibcus, Johan H.; Uebersohn, Alec; Abdennur, Nezar; Dekker, Job; Mirny, Leonid A.; Bruneau, Benoit G. (2017-05-18)
    The molecular mechanisms underlying folding of mammalian chromosomes remain poorly understood. The transcription factor CTCF is a candidate regulator of chromosomal structure. Using the auxin-inducible degron system in mouse embryonic stem cells, we show that CTCF is absolutely and dose-dependently required for looping between CTCF target sites and insulation of topologically associating domains (TADs). Restoring CTCF reinstates proper architecture on altered chromosomes, indicating a powerful instructive function for CTCF in chromatin folding. CTCF remains essential for TAD organization in non-dividing cells. Surprisingly, active and inactive genome compartments remain properly segregated upon CTCF depletion, revealing that compartmentalization of mammalian chromosomes emerges independently of proper insulation of TADs. Furthermore, our data support that CTCF mediates transcriptional insulator function through enhancer blocking but not as a direct barrier to heterochromatin spreading. Beyond defining the functions of CTCF in chromosome folding, these results provide new fundamental insights into the rules governing mammalian genome organization.
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    Targeted degradation of CTCF decouples local insulation of chromosome domains from higher-order genomic compartmentalization [preprint]

    Nora, Elphege P.; Goloborodko, Anton; Valton, Anne-Laure; Gibcus, Johan H.; Uebersohn, Alec; Abdennur, Nezar; Dekker, Job; Mirny, Leonid A.; Bruneau, Benoit (2017-01-09)
    The molecular mechanisms underlying folding of mammalian chromosomes remain poorly understood. The transcription factor CTCF is a candidate regulator of chromosomal structure. Using the auxin-inducible degron system in mouse embryonic stem cells, we show that CTCF is absolutely and dose-dependently required for looping between CTCF target sites and segmental organization into topologically associating domains (TADs). Restoring CTCF reinstates proper architecture on altered chromosomes, indicating a powerful instructive function for CTCF in chromatin folding, and CTCF remains essential for TAD organization in non-dividing cells. Surprisingly, active and inactive genome compartments remain properly segregated upon CTCF depletion, revealing that compartmentalization of mammalian chromosomes emerges independently of proper insulation of TADs. Further, our data supports that CTCF mediates transcriptional insulator function through enhancer-blocking but not direct chromatin barrier activity. These results define the functions of CTCF in chromosome folding, and provide new fundamental insights into the rules governing mammalian genome organization.
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    Predictive polymer modeling reveals coupled fluctuations in chromosome conformation and transcription

    Giorgetti, Luca; Galupa, Rafael; Nora, Elphege P.; Piolot, Tristan; Lam, France; Dekker, Job; Tiana, Guido; Heard, Edith (2014-05-08)
    A new level of chromosome organization, topologically associating domains (TADs), was recently uncovered by chromosome conformation capture (3C) techniques. To explore TAD structure and function, we developed a polymer model that can extract the full repertoire of chromatin conformations within TADs from population-based 3C data. This model predicts actual physical distances and to what extent chromosomal contacts vary between cells. It also identifies interactions within single TADs that stabilize boundaries between TADs and allows us to identify and genetically validate key structural elements within TADs. Combining the model's predictions with high-resolution DNA FISH and quantitative RNA FISH for TADs within the X-inactivation center (Xic), we dissect the relationship between transcription and spatial proximity to cis-regulatory elements. We demonstrate that contacts between potential regulatory elements occur in the context of fluctuating structures rather than stable loops and propose that such fluctuations may contribute to asymmetric expression in the Xic during X inactivation.
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    Segmental folding of chromosomes: A basis for structural and regulatory chromosomal neighborhoods?

    Nora, Elphege P.; Dekker, Job; Heard, Edith (Wiley Periodicals, 2013-09-01)
    We discuss here a series of testable hypotheses concerning the role of chromosome folding into topologically associating domains (TADs). Several lines of evidence suggest that segmental packaging of chromosomal neighborhoods may underlie features of chromatin that span large domains, such as heterochromatin blocks, association with the nuclear lamina and replication timing. By defining which DNA elements preferentially contact each other, the segmentation of chromosomes into TADs may also underlie many properties of long-range transcriptional regulation. Several observations suggest that TADs can indeed provide a structural basis to regulatory landscapes, by controlling enhancer sharing and allocation. We also discuss how TADs may shape the evolution of chromosomes, by causing maintenance of synteny over large chromosomal segments. Finally we suggest a series of experiments to challenge these ideas and provide concrete examples illustrating how they could be practically applied.
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    HiTC : Exploration of High-Throughput 'C' experiments

    Servant, Nicolas; Lajoie, Bryan R.; Nora, Elphege P.; Giorgetti, Luca; Chen, Chongjian; Heard, Edith; Dekker, Job; Barillot, Emmanuel (2012-11-01)
    The R/Bioconductor package HiTC facilitates the exploration of high-throughtput 3C-based data. It allows users to import and export 'C' data, to transform, normalize, annotate and visualize interaction maps. The package operates within the Bioconductor framework, and thus offers new opportunities for future development in this field.Availability and Implementation: The R package HiTC is available from the Bioconductor web site. A detailed vignette provides additional documentation and help for using the package.
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    Spatial partitioning of the regulatory landscape of the X-inactivation centre

    Nora, Elphege P.; Lajoie, Bryan R.; Schulz, Edda G.; Giorgetti, Luca; Okamoto, Ikuhiro; Servant, Nicolas; Piolot, Tristan; van Berkum, Nynke L.; Meisig, Johannes; Sedat, John; et al. (2012-05-17)
    In eukaryotes transcriptional regulation often involves multiple long-range elements and is influenced by the genomic environment. A prime example of this concerns the mouse X-inactivation centre (Xic), which orchestrates the initiation of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) by controlling the expression of the non-protein-coding Xist transcript. The extent of Xic sequences required for the proper regulation of Xist remains unknown. Here we use chromosome conformation capture carbon-copy (5C) and super-resolution microscopy to analyse the spatial organization of a 4.5-megabases (Mb) region including Xist. We discover a series of discrete 200-kilobase to 1 Mb topologically associating domains (TADs), present both before and after cell differentiation and on the active and inactive X. TADs align with, but do not rely on, several domain-wide features of the epigenome, such as H3K27me3 or H3K9me2 blocks and lamina-associated domains. TADs also align with coordinately regulated gene clusters. Disruption of a TAD boundary causes ectopic chromosomal contacts and long-range transcriptional misregulation. The Xist/Tsix sense/antisense unit illustrates how TADs enable the spatial segregation of oppositely regulated chromosomal neighbourhoods, with the respective promoters of Xist and Tsix lying in adjacent TADs, each containing their known positive regulators. We identify a novel distal regulatory region of Tsix within its TAD, which produces a long intervening RNA, Linx. In addition to uncovering a new principle of cis-regulatory architecture of mammalian chromosomes, our study sets the stage for the full genetic dissection of the X-inactivation centre.
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