4.8 Article

Human tRNA genes function as chromatin insulators

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 330-350

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1038/emboj.2011.406

Keywords

chromatin; chromosome conformation capture; human; insulator; tRNA

Funding

  1. NIH [GM078068]
  2. University of California Cancer Research coordinating committee [T32-GM008646]
  3. UC [2008-16]

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Insulators help separate active chromatin domains from silenced ones. In yeast, gene promoters act as insulators to block the spread of Sir and HP1 mediated silencing while in metazoans most insulators are multipartite autonomous entities. tDNAs are repetitive sequences dispersed throughout the human genome and we now show that some of these tDNAs can function as insulators in human cells. Using computational methods, we identified putative human tDNA insulators. Using silencer blocking, transgene protection and repressor blocking assays we show that some of these tDNA-containing fragments can function as barrier insulators in human cells. We find that these elements also have the ability to block enhancers from activating RNA pol II transcribed promoters. Characterization of a putative tDNA insulator in human cells reveals that the site possesses chromatin signatures similar to those observed at other better-characterized eukaryotic insulators. Enhanced 4C analysis demonstrates that the tDNA insulator makes long-range chromatin contacts with other tDNAs and ETC sites but not with intervening or flanking RNA pol II transcribed genes. The EMBO Journal (2012) 31, 330-350. doi:10.1038/emboj.2011.406; Published online 15 November 2011

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