AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research shows that while we understand more about genome topology, the role of repeat sequences in mammalian genomes, especially around centromeres, is still unclear.
  • Scientists have developed a method to identify pericentromere-associated domains (PADs) in various mouse cell types and found that chromocenters interact with inactive genomic areas rather than being actively recruited to them.
  • Additionally, they discovered that bringing an active gene close to chromocenters can lead to its repression, indicating that pericentromeric satellite repeats help maintain the inactive status of nearby genetic regions rather than driving nuclear organization.

Article Abstract

Despite recent progress in genome topology knowledge, the role of repeats, which make up the majority of mammalian genomes, remains elusive. Satellite repeats are highly abundant sequences that cluster around centromeres, attract pericentromeric heterochromatin, and aggregate into nuclear chromocenters. These nuclear landmark structures are assumed to form a repressive compartment in the nucleus to which genes are recruited for silencing. We have designed a strategy for genome-wide identification of pericentromere-associated domains (PADs) in different mouse cell types. The ∼1000 PADs and non-PADs have similar chromatin states in embryonic stem cells, but during lineage commitment, chromocenters progressively associate with constitutively inactive genomic regions at the nuclear periphery. This suggests that PADs are not actively recruited to chromocenters, but that chromocenters are themselves attracted to inactive chromatin compartments. However, we also found that experimentally induced proximity of an active locus to chromocenters was sufficient to cause gene repression. Collectively, our data suggest that rather than driving nuclear organization, pericentromeric satellite repeats mostly co-segregate with inactive genomic regions into nuclear compartments where they can contribute to stable maintenance of the repressed status of proximal chromosomal regions.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4484393PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.186643.114DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent research shows that while we understand more about genome topology, the role of repeat sequences in mammalian genomes, especially around centromeres, is still unclear.
  • Scientists have developed a method to identify pericentromere-associated domains (PADs) in various mouse cell types and found that chromocenters interact with inactive genomic areas rather than being actively recruited to them.
  • Additionally, they discovered that bringing an active gene close to chromocenters can lead to its repression, indicating that pericentromeric satellite repeats help maintain the inactive status of nearby genetic regions rather than driving nuclear organization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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