Profiling the long noncoding RNA interaction network in the regulatory elements of target genes by chromatin in situ reverse transcription sequencing
- Shilin Zhang1,
- Yichen Wang1,
- Lin Jia1,
- Xue Wen2,
- Du Zhonghua1,
- Cong Wang1,
- Yajing Hao3,
- Dehai Yu1,
- Lei Zhou1,
- Naifei Chen1,
- Jingchen Chen1,
- Huiling Chen1,
- Hui Zhang4,
- Ilkay Celik1,
- Gunhan Gulsoy5,
- Jianjun Luo3,
- Baoming Qin4,
- Xueling Cui6,
- Zhonghui Liu6,
- Songling Zhang2,
- Miguel A Esteban4,
- Ferhat Ay7,
- Wei Li2,
- Wei Xu2,
- Runsheng Chen3,
- Andrew R Hoffman1,
- Jifan Hu1,8 and
- Jiuwei Cui2
Abstract
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) can regulate the activity of target genes by participating in the organization of chromatin architecture. We have devised a 'chromatin-RNA in situ reverse-transcription sequencing'; (CRIST-seq) approach to profile the lncRNA interaction network in gene regulatory elements by combining the simplicity of RNA biotin labeling with the specificity of the CRISPR/Cas9 system. Using gene-specific gRNAs, we describe a pluripotency-specific lncRNA interacting network in the promoters of Sox2 and Pou5f1, two critical stem cell factors that are required for the maintenance of pluripotency. The promoter-interacting lncRNAs were specifically activated during reprogramming into pluripotency. Knockdown of these lncRNAs caused the stem cells to exit from pluripotency. In contrast, overexpression of the pluripotency-associated lncRNA activated the promoters of core stem cell factor genes, and enhanced fibroblast reprogramming into pluripotency. These CRIST-seq data suggest that the Sox2 and Pou5f1 promoters are organized within a unique lncRNA interaction network that determines the fate of pluripotency during reprogramming. This CRIST approach may be broadly used to map lncRNA interaction networks at target loci across the genome.
- Received October 10, 2018.
- Accepted July 10, 2019.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
This manuscript is Open Access.
This article, published in Genome Research, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International license), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.











