Publication

Distinct Classes of Chromatin Loops Revealed by Deletion of an RNA-Binding Region in CTCF.

current
   December 2nd, 2019 at 6:34am

Overview


Abstract

Mammalian genomes are folded into topologically associating domains (TADs), consisting of chromatin loops anchored by CTCF and cohesin. Some loops are cell-type specific. Here we asked whether CTCF loops are established by a universal or locus-specific mechanism. Investigating the molecular determinants of CTCF clustering, we found that CTCF self-association in vitro is RNase sensitive and that an internal RNA-binding region (RBRi) mediates CTCF clustering and RNA interaction in vivo. Strikingly, deleting the RBRi impairs about half of all chromatin loops in mESCs and causes deregulation of gene expression. Disrupted loop formation correlates with diminished clustering and chromatin binding of RBRi mutant CTCF, which in turn results in a failure to halt cohesin-mediated extrusion. Thus, CTCF loops fall into at least two classes: RBRi-independent and RBRi-dependent loops. We speculate that evidence for RBRi-dependent loops may provide a molecular mechanism for establishing cell-specific CTCF loops, potentially regulated by RNA(s) or other RBRi-interacting partners.

Authors

Hansen AS  •  Hsieh TS  •  Cattoglio C  •  Pustova I  •  Saldana-Meyer R  •  Reinberg D  •  Darzacq X  •  Tjian R

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31522987


Journal

Molecular cell

PMID:31522987

Published

November 7th, 2019