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CTCF controls HOXA cluster silencing and mediates PRC2-repressive higher-order chromatin structure in NT2/D1 cells.


ABSTRACT: HOX cluster genes are activated sequentially in their positional order along the chromosome during vertebrate development. This phenomenon, known as temporal colinearity, depends on transcriptional silencing of 5' HOX genes. Chromatin looping was recently identified as a conserved feature of silent HOX clusters, with CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) binding sites located at the loop bases. However, the potential contribution of CTCF to HOX cluster silencing and the underlying mechanism have not been established. Here, we demonstrate that the HOXA locus is organized by CTCF into chromatin loops and that CTCF depletion causes significantly enhanced activation of HOXA3 to -A7, -A9 to -A11, and -A13 in response to retinoic acid, with the highest effect observed for HOXA9. Our subsequent analyses revealed that CTCF facilitates the stabilization of Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) and trimethylated lysine 27 of histone H3 (H3K27me3) at the human HOXA locus. Our results reveal that CTCF functions as a controller of HOXA cluster silencing and mediates PRC2-repressive higher-order chromatin structure.

SUBMITTER: Xu M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4187707 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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CTCF controls HOXA cluster silencing and mediates PRC2-repressive higher-order chromatin structure in NT2/D1 cells.

Xu Miao M   Zhao Guang-Nian GN   Lv Xiang X   Liu Guoyou G   Wang Lily Yan LY   Hao De-Long DL   Wang Junwen J   Liu De-Pei DP   Liang Chih-Chuan CC  

Molecular and cellular biology 20140818 20


HOX cluster genes are activated sequentially in their positional order along the chromosome during vertebrate development. This phenomenon, known as temporal colinearity, depends on transcriptional silencing of 5' HOX genes. Chromatin looping was recently identified as a conserved feature of silent HOX clusters, with CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) binding sites located at the loop bases. However, the potential contribution of CTCF to HOX cluster silencing and the underlying mechanism have not been  ...[more]

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