Publication

TCF-1 promotes chromatin interactions across topologically associating domains in T cell progenitors.

current
   October 13th, 2022 at 3:33pm

Overview


Abstract

The high mobility group (HMG) transcription factor TCF-1 is essential for early T cell development. Although in vitro biochemical assays suggest that HMG proteins can serve as architectural elements in the assembly of higher-order nuclear organization, the contribution of TCF-1 on the control of three-dimensional (3D) genome structures during T cell development remains unknown. Here, we investigated the role of TCF-1 in 3D genome reconfiguration. Using gain- and loss-of-function experiments, we discovered that the co-occupancy of TCF-1 and the architectural protein CTCF altered the structure of topologically associating domains in T cell progenitors, leading to interactions between previously insulated regulatory elements and target genes at late stages of T cell development. The TCF-1-dependent gain in long-range interactions was linked to deposition of active enhancer mark H3K27ac and recruitment of the cohesin-loading factor NIPBL at active enhancers. These data indicate that TCF-1 has a role in controlling global genome organization during T cell development.

Authors

Wang W  •  Chandra A  •  Goldman N  •  Yoon S  •  Ferrari EK  •  Nguyen SC  •  Joyce EF  •  Vahedi G

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35726060


Journal

Nature immunology

PMID:35726060

Published

July 2022