Polycomb Proteins Targeted by a Short Repeat RNA to the Mouse X Chromosome
Howard Hughes Medical Institute · Harvard University · +1 more institution
Abstract
To equalize X-chromosome dosages between the sexes, the female mammal inactivates one of her two X chromosomes. X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) is initiated by expression of Xist, a 17-kb noncoding RNA (ncRNA) that accumulates on the X in cis. Because interacting factors have not been isolated, the mechanism by which Xist induces silencing remains unknown. We discovered a 1.6-kilobase ncRNA (RepA) within Xist and identified the Polycomb complex, PRC2, as its direct target. PRC2 is initially recruited to the X by RepA RNA, with Ezh2 serving as the RNA binding subunit. The antisense Tsix RNA inhibits this interaction. RepA depletion abolishes full-length Xist induction and trimethylation on lysine 27 of histone…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 48.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
5- JZJing Zhao
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- BKBryan K. Sun
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- JAJennifer A. Erwin
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- JSJi‐Joon Song
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- JTJeannie T. LeeCorresponding
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
Topics & keywords
- XIST
- X-inactivation
- PRC2
- Biology
- RNA
- Non-coding RNA
- Genetics
- X chromosome