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Site-Specific Silencing of Regulatory Elements as a Mechanism of X Inactivation
Author(s) -
J. Mauro Calabrese,
Wei Sun,
Lingyun Song,
Joshua W. Mugford,
Lucy H. Williams,
Della Yee,
Joshua Starmer,
Piotr A. Mieczkowski,
Gregory E. Crawford,
Terry Magnuson
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.2012.10.037
Subject(s) - biology , x inactivation , ctcf , xist , chromatin , gene silencing , genetics , genomic imprinting , dna methylation , transcription (linguistics) , gene , epigenetics , regulation of gene expression , microbiology and biotechnology , x chromosome , transcription factor , gene expression , enhancer , linguistics , philosophy
The inactive X chromosome's (Xi) physical territory is microscopically devoid of transcriptional hallmarks and enriched in silencing-associated modifications. How these microscopic signatures relate to specific Xi sequences is unknown. Therefore, we profiled Xi gene expression and chromatin states at high resolution via allele-specific sequencing in mouse trophoblast stem cells. Most notably, X-inactivated transcription start sites harbored distinct epigenetic signatures relative to surrounding Xi DNA. These sites displayed H3-lysine27-trimethylation enrichment and DNaseI hypersensitivity, similar to autosomal Polycomb targets, yet excluded Pol II and other transcriptional hallmarks, similar to nontranscribed genes. CTCF bound X-inactivated and escaping genes, irrespective of measured chromatin boundaries. Escape from X inactivation occurred within, and X inactivation was maintained exterior to, the area encompassed by Xist in cells subject to imprinted and random X inactivation. The data support a model whereby inactivation of specific regulatory elements, rather than a simple chromosome-wide separation from transcription machinery, governs gene silencing over the Xi.

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