Publication

Multifaceted roles of cohesin in regulating transcriptional loops.

current
   June 28th, 2024 at 5:31pm

Overview


Abstract

Cohesin is required for chromatin loop formation. However, its precise role in regulating gene transcription remains largely unknown. We investigated the relationship between cohesin and RNA Polymerase II (RNAPII) using single-molecule mapping and live-cell imaging methods in human cells. Cohesin-mediated transcriptional loops were highly correlated with those of RNAPII and followed the direction of gene transcription. Depleting RAD21, a subunit of cohesin, resulted in the loss of long-range (>100 kb) loops between distal (super-)enhancers and promoters of cell-type-specific genes. By contrast, the short-range (<50 kb) loops were insensitive to RAD21 depletion and connected genes that are mostly housekeeping. This result explains why only a small fraction of genes are affected by the loss of long-range chromatin interactions due to cohesin depletion. Remarkably, RAD21 depletion appeared to up-regulate genes located in early initiation zones (EIZ) of DNA replication, and the EIZ signals were amplified drastically without RAD21. Our results revealed new mechanistic insights of cohesin's multifaceted roles in establishing transcriptional loops, preserving long-range chromatin interactions for cell-specific genes, and maintaining timely order of DNA replication.

Authors

Kim M  •  Wang P  •  Clow PA  •  Chien IE  •  Wang X  •  Peng J  •  Chai H  •  Liu X  •  Lee B  •  Ngan CY  •  Yue F  •  Milenkovic O  •  Chuang JH  •  Wei CL  •  Casellas R  •  Cheng AW  •  Ruan Y

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38585764


Journal

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

doi:10.1101/2024.03.25.586715

Published

March 27th, 2024