Publication

A mechanism of cohesin-dependent loop extrusion organizes zygotic genome architecture.

current
   June 14th, 2018 at 6:14pm

Overview


Abstract

Fertilization triggers assembly of higher-order chromatin structure from a condensed maternal and a naive paternal genome to generate a totipotent embryo. Chromatin loops and domains have been detected in mouse zygotes by single-nucleus Hi-C (snHi-C), but not bulk Hi-C. It is therefore unclear when and how embryonic chromatin conformations are assembled. Here, we investigated whether a mechanism of cohesin-dependent loop extrusion generates higher-order chromatin structures within the one-cell embryo. Using snHi-C of mouse knockout embryos, we demonstrate that the zygotic genome folds into loops and domains that critically depend on Scc1-cohesin and that are regulated in size and linear density by Wapl. Remarkably, we discovered distinct effects on maternal and paternal chromatin loop sizes, likely reflecting differences in loop extrusion dynamics and epigenetic reprogramming. Dynamic polymer models of chromosomes reproduce changes in snHi-C, suggesting a mechanism where cohesin locally compacts chromatin by active loop extrusion, whose processivity is controlled by Wapl. Our simulations and experimental data provide evidence that cohesin-dependent loop extrusion organizes mammalian genomes over multiple scales from the one-cell embryo onward.

Authors

Gassler J  •  Brandao HB  •  Imakaev M  •  Flyamer IM  •  Ladstatter S  •  Bickmore WA  •  Peters JM  •  Mirny LA  •  Tachibana K

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29217590


Journal

The EMBO journal

PMID:29217590

Published

December 7th, 2017