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Waves of Retrotransposon Expansion Remodel Genome Organization and CTCF Binding in Multiple Mammalian Lineages
Author(s) -
Dominic Schmidt,
Petra Schwalie,
Michael D. Wilson,
Benoît Ballester,
Ângela Gonçalves,
Claudia Kutter,
Gordon D. Brown,
Aileen Marshall,
Paul Flicek,
Duncan T. Odom
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2011.11.058
Subject(s) - ctcf , biology , retrotransposon , genome , genetics , evolutionary biology , chromatin , binding site , dna binding site , computational biology , dna , transcription factor , gene , transposable element , promoter , enhancer , gene expression
CTCF-binding locations represent regulatory sequences that are highly constrained over the course of evolution. To gain insight into how these DNA elements are conserved and spread through the genome, we defined the full spectrum of CTCF-binding sites, including a 33/34-mer motif, and identified over five thousand highly conserved, robust, and tissue-independent CTCF-binding locations by comparing ChIP-seq data from six mammals. Our data indicate that activation of retroelements has produced species-specific expansions of CTCF binding in rodents, dogs, and opossum, which often functionally serve as chromatin and transcriptional insulators. We discovered fossilized repeat elements flanking deeply conserved CTCF-binding regions, indicating that similar retrotransposon expansions occurred hundreds of millions of years ago. Repeat-driven dispersal of CTCF binding is a fundamental, ancient, and still highly active mechanism of genome evolution in mammalian lineages.

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