| Literature DB >> 27152443 |
Jonathan A Beagan1, Thomas G Gilgenast1, Jesi Kim1, Zachary Plona1, Heidi K Norton1, Gui Hu1, Sarah C Hsu2, Emily J Shields2, Xiaowen Lyu3, Effie Apostolou4, Konrad Hochedlinger4, Victor G Corces3, Job Dekker5, Jennifer E Phillips-Cremins6.
Abstract
Pluripotent genomes are folded in a topological hierarchy that reorganizes during differentiation. The extent to which chromatin architecture is reconfigured during somatic cell reprogramming is poorly understood. Here we integrate fine-resolution architecture maps with epigenetic marks and gene expression in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), neural progenitor cells (NPCs), and NPC-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). We find that most pluripotency genes reconnect to target enhancers during reprogramming. Unexpectedly, some NPC interactions around pluripotency genes persist in our iPSC clone. Pluripotency genes engaged in both "fully-reprogrammed" and "persistent-NPC" interactions exhibit over/undershooting of target expression levels in iPSCs. Additionally, we identify a subset of "poorly reprogrammed" interactions that do not reconnect in iPSCs and display only partially recovered, ESC-specific CTCF occupancy. 2i/LIF can abrogate persistent-NPC interactions, recover poorly reprogrammed interactions, reinstate CTCF occupancy, and restore expression levels. Our results demonstrate that iPSC genomes can exhibit imperfectly rewired 3D-folding linked to inaccurately reprogrammed gene expression.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27152443 PMCID: PMC4859942 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2016.04.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 24.633