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Systematic mapping of occluded genes by cell fusion reveals prevalence and stability of cis-mediated silencing in somatic cells

Authors :
Joseph R. Ecker
Bruce T. Lahn
Lu Zhang
Katelyn Michelini
Kara Foshay
Weiqiang Li
Jie Zhou
Gary P. Schroth
Eric J. Vallender
Bing Ren
Timothy J. Looney
Ulrich Wagner
Sheila Chari
Mattia Pelizzola
Thomas Stricker
Kayla L. Clift
Ryan Lister
Croydon J. Fernandes
Jane Yuxia Qin
Jedidiah Gaetz
Jae Hyun Lee
Branimir Bugarija
Emmanuel Aryee
Frank Fuxiang Mao
Andy Peng Xiang
Zhenyu Zhang
Kevin P. White
Samuel W. Baker
Li Zhang
Donghyun Park
Chih Hsin Chen
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2014.

Abstract

Both diffusible factors acting in trans and chromatin components acting in cis are implicated in gene regulation, but the extent to which either process causally determines a cell's transcriptional identity is unclear. We recently used cell fusion to define a class of silent genes termed “cis-silenced” (or “occluded”) genes, which remain silent even in the presence of trans-acting transcriptional activators. We further showed that occlusion of lineage-inappropriate genes plays a critical role in maintaining the transcriptional identities of somatic cells. Here, we present, for the first time, a comprehensive map of occluded genes in somatic cells. Specifically, we mapped occluded genes in mouse fibroblasts via fusion to a dozen different rat cell types followed by whole-transcriptome profiling. We found that occluded genes are highly prevalent and stable in somatic cells, representing a sizeable fraction of silent genes. Occluded genes are also highly enriched for important developmental regulators of alternative lineages, consistent with the role of occlusion in safeguarding cell identities. Alongside this map, we also present whole-genome maps of DNA methylation and eight other chromatin marks. These maps uncover a complex relationship between chromatin state and occlusion. Furthermore, we found that DNA methylation functions as the memory of occlusion in a subset of occluded genes, while histone deacetylation contributes to the implementation but not memory of occlusion. Our data suggest that the identities of individual cell types are defined largely by the occlusion status of their genomes. The comprehensive reference maps reported here provide the foundation for future studies aimed at understanding the role of occlusion in development and disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9fb829ec106f7896dcb3050ff02b5633