Publication

Structural elements promote architectural stripe formation and facilitate ultra-long-range gene regulation at a human disease locus.

current
   April 12th, 2023 at 7:18pm

Overview


Abstract

Enhancer clusters overlapping disease-associated mutations in Pierre Robin sequence (PRS) patients regulate SOX9 expression at genomic distances over 1.25 Mb. We applied optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture (ORCA) imaging to trace 3D locus topology during PRS-enhancer activation. We observed pronounced changes in locus topology between cell types. Subsequent analysis of single-chromatin fiber traces revealed that these ensemble-average differences arise through changes in the frequency of commonly sampled topologies. We further identified two CTCF-bound elements, internal to the SOX9 topologically associating domain, which promote stripe formation, are positioned near the domain's 3D geometric center, and bridge enhancer-promoter contacts in a series of chromatin loops. Ablation of these elements results in diminished SOX9 expression and altered domain-wide contacts. Polymer models with uniform loading across the domain and frequent cohesin collisions recapitulate this multi-loop, centrally clustered geometry. Together, we provide mechanistic insights into architectural stripe formation and gene regulation over ultra-long genomic ranges.

Authors

Chen LF  •  Long HK  •  Park M  •  Swigut T  •  Boettiger AN  •  Wysocka J

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36996812


Journal

Molecular cell

PMID:36996812

Published

March 22nd, 2023