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Architectural epigenetics: mitotic retention of mammalian transcriptional regulatory information

Zaidi, Sayyed K.
Young, Daniel W.
Montecino, Martin A.
Lian, Jane B.
Stein, Janet L.
Van Wijnen, Andre J.
Stein, Gary S.
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Abstract

Epigenetic regulatory information must be retained during mammalian cell division to sustain phenotype-specific and physiologically responsive gene expression in the progeny cells. Histone modifications, DNA methylation, and RNA-mediated silencing are well-defined epigenetic mechanisms that control the cellular phenotype by regulating gene expression. Recent results suggest that the mitotic retention of nuclease hypersensitivity, selective histone marks, as well as the lineage-specific transcription factor occupancy of promoter elements contribute to the epigenetic control of sustained cellular identity in progeny cells. We propose that these mitotic epigenetic signatures collectively constitute architectural epigenetics, a novel and essential mechanism that conveys regulatory information to sustain the control of phenotype and proliferation in progeny cells by bookmarking genes for activation or suppression.

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Mol Cell Biol. 2010 Oct;30(20):4758-66. Epub 2010 Aug 9. Link to article on publisher's site

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DOI
10.1128/MCB.00646-10
PubMed ID
20696837
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