Topologically associating domains are stable units of replication-timing regulation
Autor: | Ross C. Hardison, Bing Ren, John A. Stamatoyannopoulos, Tyrone Ryba, Michael Snyder, Benjamin D. Pope, Vishnu Dileep, Yanli Wang, Feng Yue, Jonathan H. Dennis, Günhan Gülsoy, Yong Cheng, Theresa K. Canfield, Weisheng Wu, Robert E. Thurman, Daniel L. Vera, Tamer Kahveci, James Taylor, David M. Gilbert, Olgert Denas, R. Scott Hansen |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Time Factors
DNA Replication Timing Heterochromatin Biology Article Chromosome conformation capture Mice 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Replication (statistics) Animals Humans 030304 developmental biology Genetics 0303 health sciences Replication timing Genome Multidisciplinary DNA replication DNA Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly Chromatin Cell Compartmentation Organ Specificity Evolutionary biology Eukaryotic chromosome fine structure 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Nature |
ISSN: | 1476-4687 0028-0836 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature13986 |
Popis: | Eukaryotic chromosomes replicate in a temporal order known as the replication-timing program. In mammals, replication timing is cell-type-specific with at least half the genome switching replication timing during development, primarily in units of 400-800 kilobases ('replication domains'), whose positions are preserved in different cell types, conserved between species, and appear to confine long-range effects of chromosome rearrangements. Early and late replication correlate, respectively, with open and closed three-dimensional chromatin compartments identified by high-resolution chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C), and, to a lesser extent, late replication correlates with lamina-associated domains (LADs). Recent Hi-C mapping has unveiled substructure within chromatin compartments called topologically associating domains (TADs) that are largely conserved in their positions between cell types and are similar in size to replication domains. However, TADs can be further sub-stratified into smaller domains, challenging the significance of structures at any particular scale. Moreover, attempts to reconcile TADs and LADs to replication-timing data have not revealed a common, underlying domain structure. Here we localize boundaries of replication domains to the early-replicating border of replication-timing transitions and map their positions in 18 human and 13 mouse cell types. We demonstrate that, collectively, replication domain boundaries share a near one-to-one correlation with TAD boundaries, whereas within a cell type, adjacent TADs that replicate at similar times obscure replication domain boundaries, largely accounting for the previously reported lack of alignment. Moreover, cell-type-specific replication timing of TADs partitions the genome into two large-scale sub-nuclear compartments revealing that replication-timing transitions are indistinguishable from late-replicating regions in chromatin composition and lamina association and accounting for the reduced correlation of replication timing to LADs and heterochromatin. Our results reconcile cell-type-specific sub-nuclear compartmentalization and replication timing with developmentally stable structural domains and offer a unified model for large-scale chromosome structure and function. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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