4.8 Article

Controlling Long-Range Genomic Interactions at a Native Locus by Targeted Tethering of a Looping Factor

Journal

CELL
Volume 149, Issue 6, Pages 1233-1244

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.03.051

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [5R37DK058044, 2RO1DK054937]
  2. NIDDK
  3. Intramural Program

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Chromatin loops juxtapose distal enhancers with active promoters, but their molecular architecture and relationship with transcription remain unclear. In erythroid cells, the locus control region (LCR) and beta-globin promoter form a chromatin loop that requires transcription factor GATA1 and the associated molecule Ldb1. We employed artificial zinc fingers (ZF) to tether Ldb1 to the b-globin promoter in GATA1 null erythroblasts, in which the b-globin locus is relaxed and inactive. Remarkably, targeting Ldb1 or only its self-association domain to the b-globin promoter substantially activated b-globin transcription in the absence of GATA1. Promotertethered Ldb1 interacted with endogenous Ldb1 complexes at the LCR to form a chromatin loop, causing recruitment and phosphorylation of RNA polymerase II. ZF-Ldb1 proteins were inactive at alleles lacking the LCR, demonstrating that their activities depend on long-range interactions. Our findings establish Ldb1 as a critical effector of GATA1-mediated loop formation and indicate that chromatin looping causally underlies gene regulation.

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