LATS kinase–mediated CTCF phosphorylation and selective loss of genomic binding

Huacheng Luo(University of Florida Health), Qin Yu(University of Florida Health), Yang Liu(University of Florida Health), Ming Tang(University of Florida Health), Mingwei Liang(University of Florida Health), Dingpeng Zhang(University of Florida Health), Tsan Sam Xiao(Case Western Reserve University), Lizi Wu(University of Florida Health), Ming Tan(USA Mitchell Cancer Institute), Yijun Ruan(Jackson Laboratory), Jörg Bungert(University of Florida Health), Jianrong Lu(University of Florida Health)
Science Advances
February 20, 2020
Cited by 39Open Access
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Abstract

Chromatin topological organization is instrumental in gene transcription. Gene-enhancer interactions are accommodated in the same CTCF-mediated insulated neighborhoods. However, it remains poorly understood whether and how the 3D genome architecture is dynamically restructured by external signals. Here, we report that LATS kinases phosphorylated CTCF in the zinc finger (ZF) linkers and disabled its DNA-binding activity. Cellular stress induced LATS nuclear translocation and CTCF ZF linker phosphorylation, and altered the landscape of CTCF genomic binding partly by dissociating it selectively from a small subset of its genomic binding sites. These sites were highly enriched for the boundaries of chromatin domains containing LATS signaling target genes. The stress-induced CTCF phosphorylation and locus-specific dissociation from DNA were LATS-dependent. Loss of CTCF binding disrupted local chromatin domains and down-regulated genes located within them. The study suggests that external signals may rapidly modulate the 3D genome by affecting CTCF genomic binding through ZF linker phosphorylation.


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