Contribution of epigenetic landscapes and transcription factors to X-chromosome reactivation in the inner cell mass

Archive ouverte

Borensztein, Maud | Okamoto, Ikuhiro | Syx, Laurène | Guilbaud, Guillaume | Picard, Christel | Ancelin, Katia | Galupa, Rafael | Diabangouaya, Patricia | Servant, Nicolas | Barillot, Emmanuel | Surani, Azim | Saitou, Mitinori | Chen, Chong-Jian | Anastassiadis, Konstantinos | Heard, Edith

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. X-chromosome inactivation is established during early development. In mice, transcriptional repression of the paternal X-chromosome (Xp) and enrichment in epigenetic marks such as H3K27me3 is achieved by the early blastocyst stage. X-chromosome inactivation is then reversed in the inner cell mass. The mechanisms underlying Xp reactivation remain enigmatic. Using in vivo single-cell approaches (allele-specific RNAseq, nascent RNA-fluorescent in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence), we show here that different genes are reactivated at different stages, with more slowly reactivated genes tending to be enriched in H3meK27. We further show that in UTX H3K27 histone demethylase mutant embryos, these genes are even more slowly reactivated, suggesting that these genes carry an epigenetic memory that may be actively lost. On the other hand, expression of rapidly reactivated genes may be driven by transcription factors. Thus, some X-linked genes have minimal epigenetic memory in the inner cell mass, whereas others may require active erasure of chromatin marks.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Xist-dependent imprinted X inactivation and the early developmental consequences of its failure

Archive ouverte | Borensztein, Maud | CCSD

International audience. The long noncoding RNA Xist is expressed from only the paternal X chromosome in mouse preimplantation female embryos and mediates transcriptional silencing of that chromosome. In females, abs...

Inversion of a topological domain leads to restricted changes in its gene expression and affects inter-domain communication

Archive ouverte | Galupa, Rafael | CCSD

The interplay between the topological organization of the genome and the regulation of gene expression remains unclear. Depletion of molecular factors underlying genome topology, such as CTCF and cohesin, leads to modest alteratio...

Inversion of a topological domain leads to restricted changes in its gene expression and affects interdomain communication

Archive ouverte | Galupa, Rafael | CCSD

International audience. The interplay between the topological organization of the genome and the regulation of gene expression remains unclear. Depletion of molecular factors (e.g. CTCF) underlying topologically ass...

Chargement des enrichissements...