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Bernhard Payer

Universitat Pompeu Fabra

ORCID: 0000-0002-4694-2082

Publishes on Pluripotent Stem Cells Research, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering, Genetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities. 71 papers and 5.3k citations.

71Publications
5.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

X Chromosome Dosage Compensation: How Mammals Keep the Balance
Bernhard Payer, Jeannie T. Lee|Annual Review of Genetics|2008
Cited by 532

The development of genetic sex determination and cytologically distinct sex chromosomes leads to the potential problem of gene dosage imbalances between autosomes and sex chromosomes and also between males and females. To circumvent these imbalances, mammals have developed an elaborate system of dosage compensation that includes both upregulation and repression of the X chromosome. Recent advances have provided insights into the evolutionary history of how both the imprinted and random forms of X chromosome inactivation have come about. Furthermore, our understanding of the epigenetic switch at the X-inactivation center and the molecular aspects of chromosome-wide silencing has greatly improved recently. Here, we review various facets of the ever-expanding field of mammalian dosage compensation and discuss its evolutionary, developmental, and mechanistic components.

A comprehensive Xist interactome reveals cohesin repulsion and an RNA-directed chromosome conformation
Cited by 500

The inactive X chromosome (Xi) serves as a model to understand gene silencing on a global scale. Here, we perform "identification of direct RNA interacting proteins" (iDRiP) to isolate a comprehensive protein interactome for Xist, an RNA required for Xi silencing. We discover multiple classes of interactors-including cohesins, condensins, topoisomerases, RNA helicases, chromatin remodelers, and modifiers-that synergistically repress Xi transcription. Inhibiting two or three interactors destabilizes silencing. Although Xist attracts some interactors, it repels architectural factors. Xist evicts cohesins from the Xi and directs an Xi-specific chromosome conformation. Upon deleting Xist, the Xi acquires the cohesin-binding and chromosomal architecture of the active X. Our study unveils many layers of Xi repression and demonstrates a central role for RNA in the topological organization of mammalian chromosomes.