Bipartite structure of the inactive mouse X chromosome

Xinxian Deng(University of Washington), Wenxiu Ma(University of Washington), Vijay Ramani(University of Washington), Andrew J. Hill(University of Washington), Fan Yang(University of Washington), Ferhat Ay(University of Washington), Joel B. Berletch(University of Washington), C. Anthony Blau(University of Washington), Jay Shendure(University of Washington), Zhijun Duan(California Institute for Regenerative Medicine), William Stafford Noble(University of Washington), Christine M. Distèche(University of Washington)
Genome biology
July 27, 2015
Cited by 273Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: In mammals, one of the female X chromosomes and all imprinted genes are expressed exclusively from a single allele in somatic cells. To evaluate structural changes associated with allelic silencing, we have applied a recently developed Hi-C assay that uses DNase I for chromatin fragmentation to mouse F1 hybrid systems. RESULTS: We find radically different conformations for the two female mouse X chromosomes. The inactive X has two superdomains of frequent intrachromosomal contacts separated by a boundary region. Comparison with the recently reported two-superdomain structure of the human inactive X shows that the genomic content of the superdomains differs between species, but part of the boundary region is conserved and located near the Dxz4/DXZ4 locus. In mouse, the boundary region also contains a minisatellite, Ds-TR, and both Dxz4 and Ds-TR appear to be anchored to the nucleolus. Genes that escape X inactivation do not cluster but are located near the periphery of the 3D structure, as are regions enriched in CTCF or RNA polymerase. Fewer short-range intrachromosomal contacts are detected for the inactive alleles of genes subject to X inactivation compared with the active alleles and with genes that escape X inactivation. This pattern is also evident for imprinted genes, in which more chromatin contacts are detected for the expressed allele. CONCLUSIONS: By applying a novel Hi-C method to map allelic chromatin contacts, we discover a specific bipartite organization of the mouse inactive X chromosome that probably plays an important role in maintenance of gene silencing.


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