Cohesin and CTCF differentially affect chromatin architecture and gene expression in human cells
Institute of Cell Biology · Ludwig Cancer Research · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Recent studies of genome-wide chromatin interactions have revealed that the human genome is partitioned into many self-associating topological domains. The boundary sequences between domains are enriched for binding sites of CTCC-binding factor (CTCF) and the cohesin complex, implicating these two factors in the establishment or maintenance of topological domains. To determine the role of cohesin and CTCF in higher-order chromatin architecture in human cells, we depleted the cohesin complex or CTCF and examined the consequences of loss of these factors on higher-order chromatin organization, as well as the transcriptome. We observed a general loss of local chromatin interactions upon disruption of cohesin, but…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
13- JZJessica ZuinCorresponding
Institute of Cell Biology
- JRJesse R. Dixon
Ludwig Cancer Research, National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, Institute of Biomedical Science
- MIMichael I. J. A. van der Reijden
Institute of Cell Biology
- ZYZhen Ye
University of California San Diego, Ludwig Cancer Research
- PKPetros Kolovos
Institute of Cell Biology
Topics & keywords
- CTCF
- Cohesin
- Chromatin
- Biology
- Genomic organization
- Genetics
- Nucleosome
- Genome