| Literature DB >> 20174815 |
Rolf Ohlsson1, Marek Bartkuhn, Rainer Renkawitz.
Abstract
More than 10(9) base pairs of the genome in higher eucaryotes are positioned in the interphase nucleus such that gene activation, gene repression, remote gene regulation by enhancer elements, and reading as well as adjusting epigenetic marks are possible. One important structural and functional component of chromatin organization is the zinc finger factor CTCF. Two decades of research has advanced the understanding of the fundamental role that CTCF plays in regulating such a vast expanse of DNA.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20174815 PMCID: PMC2910314 DOI: 10.1007/s00412-010-0262-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chromosoma ISSN: 0009-5915 Impact factor: 4.316
Time line in CTCF milestones
| 1990 | CTCF or NeP1 is discovered as a transcriptional repressor/silencer of the chicken myc and lysozyme genes (Baniahmad et al. |
| 1997 | CTCF and NeP1 are identical (Burcin et al. |
| CTCF is an activator (Vostrov and Quitschke | |
| 1998 | The CTCF gene is localized in a chromosomal region frequently deleted in breast and prostate cancers (Filippova et al. |
| 1999 | Enhancer blocking activity of the LCR insulators is mediated by CTCF (Bell et al. |
| 2000 | Imprinted expression of the Igf2 gene is controlled by CTCF, and DNA binding is methylation sensitive (Bell and Felsenfeld |
| 2001 | CTG triplet repeat expansion prevents CTCF binding by DNA methylation (Filippova et al. |
| 2002 | X inactivation choice/imprinting center with multiple CTCF binding sites (Chao et al. |
| Germ line-specific paralogous protein CTCFL (BORIS) is discovered (Loukinov et al. | |
| CTCF binds to linker regions between positioned nucleosomes (Kanduri et al. | |
| 2003 | Enhancer blocking can be modulated by thyroid hormone (Lutz et al. |
| Maintenance of Igf2/H19 differential DNA methylation requires CTCF (Pant et al. | |
| 2004 | Enhancer blocking by CTCF is regulated by poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation (Yu et al. |
| Three-dimensional positioning of interphase chromatin is mediated by CTCF (Yusufzai et al. | |
| Microdeletions of CTS result in Beckwith–Wiedemann Syndrome (Sparago et al. | |
| 2005 | CTCF binding and three-dimensional chromatin structure at the H19 locus are maintained throughout mitosis (Burke et al. |
| CTCF-mediated enhancer blocking is conserved from | |
| Antisense transcription of triplet repeats is constrained by CTCF (Cho et al. | |
| Boundaries between X inactivation and escape of inactivation bind CTCF (Filippova et al. | |
| CTCF antagonizes with CTCFL at the cancer testis gene MAGE-A1 (Vatolin et al. | |
| 2006 | Chromatin remodeling mediated by CTCF recruitment of CHD8 (Ishihara et al. |
| Recruitment of PRMT7 by CTCFL may promote DNA methylation (Jelinic et al. | |
| Three-dimensional long-range chromatin interaction is mediated by CTCF (Kurukuti et al. | |
| Interchromosomal interaction mediated by CTCF (Ling et al. | |
| rDNA gene transcription is inhibited by CTCF (Torrano et al. | |
| 2007 | Whole-genome high-resolution mapping identifies CTCF at boundaries of histone methylation domains in vertebrates (Barski et al. |
| CTCF regulates asynchronous replication (Bergstrom et al. | |
| Recruitment of RNA polymerase II to CTCF target sites (Chernukhin et al. | |
| The | |
| Functional separation of the Bithorax complex regulatory elements is mediated by dCTCF (Holohan et al. | |
| Homologous X-chromosome pairing requires CTCF (Xu et al. | |
| 2008 | A set of about 20 nucleosomes is positioned by CTCF (Fu et al. |
| Transcription causes eviction of CTCF from chromatin (Lefevre et al. | |
| Cohesins functionally interact with CTCF and mediate enhancer blocking (Parelho et al. | |
| DNA methylation causes CTCFL-induced transcriptional activation (Sun et al. | |
| 2009 | Insulators and active promoters share the insulator cofactor CP190 (Bartkuhn et al. |
| Three subclasses of | |
| Loss of CTCF binding silences tumor suppressor gene (Witcher and Emerson | |
| Oct4 with CTCF control X-chromosome pairing and counting (Donohoe et al. | |
| CTCF regulates replication timing in |
Fig. 1Three-dimensional chromatin interaction is observed on two levels of complexity. CTCF–cohesin complexes (green) contract chromatin fibers in cis by linking nearby CTCF binding sites. For longer-range interactions, such as between different chromosomes (light and dark blue), specificity beyond the CTCF–cohesin interaction appears to be necessary. This process may be mediated by unknown factors in concert with the CTCF–cohesin complex bound to one of the chromatin partners
Fig. 2Heterochromatic (inactive) chromatin regions are insulated from euchromatic (active) regions. Active domains, as exemplified by active genes, histone acetylation, or histone H3 lysine 4 methylation (H3K4me2), are separated from inactive domains, which are identified by repressed genes, histone H3 lysine 27 methylation (H3K27me3), lamin B1, or polycomb binding. These heterochromatic regions are often associated with the nuclear lamina (gray arc). Several chromatin features have been identified at the border position between domains. These are CpG islands and active promoters, loss, or high turnover rate of nucleosomes and CTCF/cohesin binding. A border function may be mediated by chromatin activation at these regions to counteract any spreading of inactive chromatin marks into the active domains