Literature DB >> 28228067

Epigenetic characteristics of the mitotic chromosome in 1D and 3D.

Marlies E Oomen1, Job Dekker2.   

Abstract

While chromatin characteristics in interphase are widely studied, characteristics of mitotic chromatin and their inheritance through mitosis are still poorly understood. During mitosis, chromatin undergoes dramatic changes: transcription stalls, chromatin-binding factors leave the chromatin, histone modifications change and chromatin becomes highly condensed. Many key insights into mitotic chromosome state and conformation have come from extensive microscopy studies over the last century. Over the last decade, the development of 3C-based techniques has enabled the study of higher order chromosome organization during mitosis in a genome-wide manner. During mitosis, chromosomes lose their cell type-specific and locus-dependent chromatin organization that characterizes interphase chromatin and fold into randomly positioned loop arrays. Upon exit of mitosis, cells are capable of quickly rearranging the chromosome conformation to form the cell type-specific interphase organization again. The information that enables this rearrangement after mitotic exit is thought to be encoded at least in part in mitotic bookmarks, e.g. histone modifications and variants, histone remodelers, chromatin factors, and non-coding RNA. Here we give an overview of the chromosomal organization and epigenetic characteristics of interphase and mitotic chromatin in vertebrates. Second, we describe different ways in which mitotic bookmarking enables epigenetic memory of the features of interphase chromatin through mitosis. And third, we explore the role of epigenetic modifications and mitotic bookmarking in cell differentiation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chromatin organization; cell cycle; epigenetic memory; epigenetics; histone modification; mitosis; mitotic bookmarking

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28228067      PMCID: PMC5456460          DOI: 10.1080/10409238.2017.1287160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol        ISSN: 1040-9238            Impact factor:   8.250


  179 in total

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Review 9.  Dynamic 3D Chromatin Reorganization during Establishment and Maintenance of Pluripotency.

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  9 in total

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