Chromatin architecture transition from Rabl-like to chromosome territory during animal development
ID:141
Submission ID:52 View Protection:ATTENDEE
Updated Time:2024-10-28 14:15:01 Hits:70
Poster Presentation
Abstract
The eukaryotic chromatin architecture was previously divided into two types, either with (called Rabl-like, RBL) or without (called chromosome territories, CT) pronounced centromere or/and telomere clustering, possibly attributed to the absence/presence of certain subunits of condensin II. By studying time series of embryonic chromatin interaction data, we show that RBL or CT is not a species-dependent feature, instead three distantly related animals all exhibit both types of architecture, and a RBL-to-CT transition during development. This transition appears to be not related to the expression of condensin II gene, but might be influenced by the repeat distribution along chromosomes. Finally, we found a progressively establishment of long-range cis- and trans-interactions between A1 sub-compartments, leading to the dominance of CT over RBL in late developmental/adult stages.
Keywords
Chromosome architecture; Rabl; CT; Hi-C; embryonic development
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