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Cooperation between a hierarchical set of recruitment sites targets the X chromosome for dosage compensation.

Sarah Elizabeth AlbrittonAnna-Lena KranzLara Heermans WinterkornLena Annika StreetSevinc Ercan
Published in: eLife (2017)
In many organisms, it remains unclear how X chromosomes are specified for dosage compensation, since DNA sequence motifs shown to be important for dosage compensation complex (DCC) recruitment are themselves not X-specific. Here, we addressed this problem in C. elegans. We found that the DCC recruiter, SDC-2, is required to maintain open chromatin at a small number of primary DCC recruitment sites, whose sequence and genomic context are X-specific. Along the X, primary recruitment sites are interspersed with secondary sites, whose function is X-dependent. A secondary site can ectopically recruit the DCC when additional recruitment sites are inserted either in tandem or at a distance (>30 kb). Deletion of a recruitment site on the X results in reduced DCC binding across several megabases surrounded by topologically associating domain (TAD) boundaries. Our work elucidates that hierarchy and long-distance cooperativity between gene-regulatory elements target a single chromosome for regulation.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • dna damage
  • minimally invasive
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • amino acid
  • binding protein