Homotypic clustering of L1 and B1/Alu repeats compartmentalizes the 3D genome

Jiangbo Lu(Center for Life Sciences), Lei Chang(Peking University), Tong Li(Center for Life Sciences), Ting Wang(Center for Life Sciences), Yafei Yin(Center for Life Sciences), Ge Zhan(Center for Life Sciences), Xue Han(Center for Life Sciences), Ke Zhang(Center for Life Sciences), Yibing Tao(Center for Life Sciences), Michelle Percharde(MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences), Liang Wang(Center for Life Sciences), Qi Peng(Center for Life Sciences), Pixi Yan(Center for Life Sciences), Hui Zhang(Center for Life Sciences), Xianju Bi(Center for Life Sciences), Wen Shao(Center for Life Sciences), Yantao Hong(Center for Life Sciences), Zhongyang Wu(Center for Life Sciences), Runze Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peizhe Wang(Center for Life Sciences), Wenzhi Li(Center for Life Sciences), Jing Zhang(Center for Life Sciences), Zai Chang(Center for Life Sciences), Yingping Hou(Peking University), Bing Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Miguel Ramalho‐Santos(University of Toronto), Pilong Li(Center for Life Sciences), Wei Xie(Center for Life Sciences), Jie Na(Center for Life Sciences), Yujie Sun(Peking University), Xiaohua Shen(King Center)
Cell Research
January 29, 2021
Cited by 212Open Access
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Abstract

Organization of the genome into euchromatin and heterochromatin appears to be evolutionarily conserved and relatively stable during lineage differentiation. In an effort to unravel the basic principle underlying genome folding, here we focus on the genome itself and report a fundamental role for L1 (LINE1 or LINE-1) and B1/Alu retrotransposons, the most abundant subclasses of repetitive sequences, in chromatin compartmentalization. We find that homotypic clustering of L1 and B1/Alu demarcates the genome into grossly exclusive domains, and characterizes and predicts Hi-C compartments. Spatial segregation of L1-rich sequences in the nuclear and nucleolar peripheries and B1/Alu-rich sequences in the nuclear interior is conserved in mouse and human cells and occurs dynamically during the cell cycle. In addition, de novo establishment of L1 and B1 nuclear segregation is coincident with the formation of higher-order chromatin structures during early embryogenesis and appears to be critically regulated by L1 and B1 transcripts. Importantly, depletion of L1 transcripts in embryonic stem cells drastically weakens homotypic repeat contacts and compartmental strength, and disrupts the nuclear segregation of L1- or B1-rich chromosomal sequences at genome-wide and individual sites. Mechanistically, nuclear co-localization and liquid droplet formation of L1 repeat DNA and RNA with heterochromatin protein HP1α suggest a phase-separation mechanism by which L1 promotes heterochromatin compartmentalization. Taken together, we propose a genetically encoded model in which L1 and B1/Alu repeats blueprint chromatin macrostructure. Our model explains the robustness of genome folding into a common conserved core, on which dynamic gene regulation is overlaid across cells.


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