4.4 Review

Making connections: Insulators organize eukaryotic chromosomes into independent cis-regulatory networks

Journal

BIOESSAYS
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages 163-172

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bies.201300125

Keywords

bithorax complex; boundary elements; chromosomal domains; developmental regulation; insulator bypass; insulators; non-autonomy

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [GM043432]
  2. Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation [14.B25.31.0022, 8103]
  3. RFBR [12-04-00195-a, 11-04-01250-a, 12-04-92423-EMBL-a, 13-04-93106-CNRS_a]

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Insulators play a central role in subdividing the chromosome into a series of discrete topologically independent domains and in ensuring that enhancers and silencers contact their appropriate target genes. In this review we first discuss the general characteristics of insulator elements and their associated protein factors. A growing collection of insulator proteins have been identified including a family of proteins whose expression is developmentally regulated. We next consider several unexpected discoveries that require us to completely rethink how insulators function (and how they can best be assayed). These discoveries also require a reevaluation of how insulators might restrict or orchestrate (by preventing or promoting) interactions between regulatory elements and their target genes. We conclude by connecting these new insights into the mechanisms of insulator action to dynamic changes in the three-dimensional topology of the chromatin fiber and the generation of specific patterns of gene activity during development and differentiation.

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