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Published byRalph Henry Modified over 9 years ago
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Current Topics of Genomics and Epigenomics
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Outline Motivation for analysis of higher order chromatin structure Methods for studying long range chromatin interactions Topological domains Functional implications of topological domains Break for 5’ Paper discussion
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Chromosome conformation capture carbon copy (5C) Dostie et al., 2006
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Chromosome conformation capture carbon copy (5C) Dostie et al., 2006
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Identification of long range chromatin interaction in the human cells by 5C Sanyal et al. Nature 2012 (DOI:10.1038/nature11279)
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Network of long range chromatin interaction at promoters Sanyal et al. Nature 2012 (DOI:10.1038/nature11279)
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Network of long range chromatin interaction at promoters 50% of TSSs display one or more long- range interaction, with some interacting with as many as 20 distal fragments. Expressed TSSs interact with slightly more fragments as compared to non- expressed TSSs Out of all distal fragments interrogated, 10% interacted with one or more TSS, with some interacting with more than 10. gene–element interactions are not exclusively one-to-one, and multiple genes and distal elements can assemble in larger clusters Sanyal et al. Nature 2012 (DOI:10.1038/nature11279)
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Hi-C for genome-wide analysis of higher order chromatin structure Lieberman-Aiden et al., 2009
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Hi-C for genome-wide analysis of higher order chromatin structure Hi-C vs. FISH Mouse ES cells (from 433 Million Reads) Dixon et al., Nature, 2012
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The genome is composed of megabase sized topological domains
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Hi-C data reveals strong local chromatin interaction domains Dixon et al. Nature 2012
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The genome is composed of megabase sized topological domains Topological Domains in Mouse ES cells N = 2200
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Properties of the topological domains Topological domains are stable between different cell types. hESC IMR90 Dixon et al. Nature 2012
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Properties of the topological domains Topological domains are stable between different cell types. Topological domains are conserved between species Dixon et al. Nature 2012
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Observations Hi-C analysis reveals that the mammalian genome consists of mega-base sized topological domains (also known as TADs). Topological domains are stable across cell types and largely preserved during evolution, suggesting that they are a basic property of the chromosome architecture.
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Higher order structure of the topological domains Lieberman-Aiden et al., 2009 Compartment A Compartment B
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Topological Domains vs. Compartment A & B Replication Timing Data
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3-D model of a chromosome Structure model of the mouse Chr 2 is reconstructed using Bayesian inference approach This chromosome appears to take a helical configuration Topological domains in compartment A and B are located on different side of the chromosomal structure Red: compartment A domains Blue: compartment B domains Hu et al., PLoS Comp Bio. 2013
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3-D model of a chromosome Heterochromatin and euchromatin are located on different faces of the chromosomal structure (Red: H3K9m3 enriched domains; Blue: H3K9me3 depleted domains) Hu et al., PLoS Comp Bio. 2013
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3-D model of a chromosome Lamina B binding sites are clustered on one face of the chromosomal helical structure Red: enriched for Lamina B binding sites Blue: depleted for Lamina B binding Hu et al., PLoS Comp Bio. 2013
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3-D model of a chromosome Transcriptionally active domains are located on one face of the chromosomal helical structure Red: enriched for RNA polymerase II binding sites Blue: depleted for RNA polymerase II binding sites Hu et al., PLoS Comp Bio. 2013
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Functional implications of topological domains Prediction: Partitioning of the genome into topological domains would naturally restrict the enhancers to selective promoters
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Shh and its distal enhancer are located in the same topological domain Enhancer
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How do topological domains form?
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The topological domain boundaries coincide with heterochromatin domain boundaries Dixon et al. Nature 2012
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What protein factors bind to the topological domain boundaries? Kim et al. PNAS 2011
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Not all CTCF binding sites are at the boundaries
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Topological domain boundaries are also enriched for housekeeping genes
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Further Reading Reviews Giacomo Cavalli & Tom Misteli, “Functional implications of genome topology”, Nat Struct Mol Biol, 2013 vol. 20 (3) pp. 290-9 Michael Bulger, Mark Groudine, “Functional and Mechanistic Diversity of Distal Transcription Enhancers”, Cell, 144 (2011) 327-339. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.01.024 T Cremer, C Cremer, “Chromosome territories, nuclear architecture and gene regulation in mammalian cells”, Nat Rev Genet, 2001 vol. 2 (4) pp. 292-301 Tom Misteli, “Beyond the sequence: cellular organization of genome function”, Cell, 2007 vol. 128 (4) pp. 787-800 Elzo de Wit, Wouter de Laat, “A decade of 3C technologies: insights into nuclear organization”, Genes & Development, 2012 vol. 26 (1) pp. 11-24 Sjoerd Holwerda, Wouter de Laat, “Chromatin loops, gene positioning, and gene expression”, Front. Gene., 2012 vol. 3 pp. 1-13
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ChIA-PET (chromatin interaction analysis by paired-end tags) Fullwood … Ruan, Nature 2009 vol. 462 (7269) pp. 58-64
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