Prior studies showed that structural loops collapse upon acute cohesin depletion, while regulatory enhancer-promoter (E-P) loops largely persist, consistent with minimal transcriptional changes. However, these studies, conducted in asynchronous cells, could not resolve whether cohesin is required for the establishment of regulatory interactions and transcriptional activation during cell division or cell state transitions. To address this gap, we degraded RAD21, a core cohesin subunit, in naïve mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) transitioning from mitosis to G1 either in self-renewal condition or during differentiation toward formative pluripotency. Although most structural loops failed to be re-established without cohesin, about 35% of regulatory loops reformed at normal or higher frequencies. Cohesin-independent loops showed characteristics of strong active enhancers and promoters and a significant association with H3K27ac mitotic bookmarks. However, inhibition of CBP/p300 during mitotic exit did not impact these cohesin-independent interactions, suggesting the presence of complex compensatory mechanisms. At the transcriptional level, cohesin depletion induced only minor changes, supporting that post-mitotic transcriptional reactivation is largely independent of cohesin. The few genes with impaired reactivation were directly bound by RAD21 at their promoters, engaged in many structural loops, and located within strongly insulated TADs with low gene density. Importantly, degrading cohesin during the M-to-G1 transition in the presence of EpiLC differentiation signals revealed a larger group of susceptible genes, including key signature genes and transcription factors. Impaired activation of these genes was partly due to the failure to establish EpiLC-specific interactions in the absence of cohesin. These experiments revealed locus-specific and context-specific dependencies between cohesin, E-P interactions, and transcription.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.13.638153 | DOI Listing |
Loop-extrusion machinery, comprising the cohesin complex and CCCTC-binding factor CTCF, organizes the interphase chromosomes into topologically associating domains (TADs) and loops, but acute depletion of components of this machinery results in variable transcriptional changes in different cell types, highlighting the complex relationship between chromatin organization and gene regulation. Here, we systematically investigated the role of 3D genome architecture in gene regulation in mouse embryonic stem cells under various perturbation conditions. We found that acute depletion of cohesin or CTCF disrupts the formation of TADs, but affects gene regulation in a gene-specific and context-dependent manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrior studies showed that structural loops collapse upon acute cohesin depletion, while regulatory enhancer-promoter (E-P) loops largely persist, consistent with minimal transcriptional changes. However, these studies, conducted in asynchronous cells, could not resolve whether cohesin is required for the establishment of regulatory interactions and transcriptional activation during cell division or cell state transitions. To address this gap, we degraded RAD21, a core cohesin subunit, in naïve mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) transitioning from mitosis to G1 either in self-renewal condition or during differentiation toward formative pluripotency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Genom
February 2025
Oncode Institute, Hubrecht Institute-KNAW and University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:
Cell-type-specific gene activation is regulated by enhancers, sometimes located at large genomic distances from target gene promoters. Whether distal enhancers require specific factors to orchestrate gene regulation remains unclear. Here, we used enhancer distance-controlled reporter screens to find candidate factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
February 2025
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Cohesin folds genomes into chromatin loops, whose roles are under debate. We report that double strand breaks (DSB) induce formation of chromatin loops, with the break positioned at the loop base. These loops form only in S/G2 phases and occur during repair via homologous recombination (HR), concomitant with DNA end resection and RAD51 assembly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Struct Mol Biol
February 2025
Penn Epigenetics Institute, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Recent findings indicate that nuclear speckles, a distinct type of nuclear body, interact with certain chromatin regions in a ground state. Here, we report that the chromatin structural factors CTCF and cohesin are required for full ground-state association between DNA and nuclear speckles. We identified a putative speckle-targeting motif (STM) within cohesin subunit RAD21 and demonstrated that the STM is required for chromatin-nuclear speckle association, disruption of which also impaired induction of speckle-associated genes.
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