Small chromosomal regions position themselves autonomously according to their chromatin class
- Harmen Jan George van de Werken1,
- Josien C de Haan2,
- Yana Feodorova3,
- Dominika Bijos4,
- An Weuts2,
- Koen Theunis2,
- Sjoerd Holwerda5,
- Wouter Meuleman4,
- Ludo Pagie4,
- Katharina Thanisch3,
- Parveen Kumar2,
- Heinrich Leonhardt3,
- Peter Marynen2,
- Bas van Steesel4,
- Thierry Voet2,
- Wouter de Laat5,
- Irina Solovei6,7 and
- Boris Joffe3
- 1 Erasmus MC;
- 2 KU Leuven;
- 3 Ludwig Maximilians University Munich;
- 4 Netherlands Cancer Institute;
- 5 Hubrecht Institute;
- 6 University of Munich
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: irina.solovei{at}lrz.uni-muenchen.de
Abstract
The spatial arrangement of chromatin is linked to the regulation of nuclear processes. One striking aspect of nuclear organization is the spatial segregation of heterochromatic and euchromatic domains. The mechanisms of this chromatin segregation are still poorly understood. In this work we investigated the link between the primary genomic sequence and chromatin domains. We analyzed the spatial intranuclear arrangement of a human artificial chromosome (HAC) in a xenospecific mouse background in comparison to an orthologous region of native mouse chromosome. The two orthologous regions include segments that can be assigned to three major chromatin classes according to their gene abundance and repeat repertoire: (i) gene-rich and SINE-rich euchromatin, (ii) gene-poor and LINE/LTR-rich heterochromatin and (iii) gene-depleted and satellite DNA-containing constitutive heterochromatin. We show using FISH and 4C-seq technologies that chromatin segments ranging from 0.6 to 3 Mb cluster with segments of the same chromatin class. As a consequence, the chromatin segments acquire corresponding positions in the nucleus irrespectively of their chromosomal context thereby strongly suggesting that this is their autonomous property. Interactions with the nuclear lamina, although largely retained in the HAC, reveal less autonomy. Taken together, our results suggest that building of a functional nucleus is largely a self-organizing process based on mutual recognition of chromosome segments belonging to the major chromatin classes.
- Received August 1, 2016.
- Accepted March 22, 2017.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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