4.8 Article

Cause and Consequence of Tethering a SubTAD to Different Nuclear Compartments

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 61, Issue 3, Pages 461-473

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2016.01.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Long-Term Postdoctoral Fellowship of the Human Frontier Science Program [LT000709/2013]
  2. NWO/CW TOP grant [714.012.002]
  3. NWO VICI grant [724.012.003]
  4. NanoNextNL grant
  5. EU [2010-259743]
  6. European Research Council [209700, 4C]
  7. European Research Council (ERC) [209700] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Detailed genomic contact maps have revealed that chromosomes are structurally organized in mega-base-sized topologically associated domains (TADs) that encompass smaller subTADs. These domains segregate in the nuclearspace to form active and in active nuclear compartments, but cause and consequence of compartmentalization are largely unknown. Here, we combined lacO/lacR binding platforms with allele-specific 4C technologies to track their precise position in the three-dimensional genome upon recruitment of NANOG, SUV39H1, or EZH2. We observed locked genomic loci resistant to spatial repositioning and unlocked loci that could be repositioned to different nuclear subcompartments with distinct chromatin signatures. Focal protein recruitment caused the entire subTAD, but not surrounding regions, to engage in new genomic contacts. Compartment switching was found uncoupled from transcription changes, and the enzymatic modification of histones per se was insufficient for repositioning. Collectively, this suggests that trans-associated factors influence three-dimensional compartmentalization independent of their cis effect on local chromatin composition and activity.

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