| Literature DB >> 29022598 |
Taru Tukiainen1,2, Alexandra-Chloé Villani2,3, Angela Yen2,4, Manuel A Rivas1,2,5, Jamie L Marshall1,2, Rahul Satija2,6,7, Matt Aguirre1,2, Laura Gauthier1,2, Mark Fleharty2, Andrew Kirby1,2, Beryl B Cummings1,2, Stephane E Castel6,8, Konrad J Karczewski1,2, François Aguet2, Andrea Byrnes1,2, Tuuli Lappalainen6,8, Aviv Regev2,9, Kristin G Ardlie2, Nir Hacohen2,3, Daniel G MacArthur1,2.
Abstract
X chromosome inactivation (XCI) silences transcription from one of the two X chromosomes in female mammalian cells to balance expression dosage between XX females and XY males. XCI is, however, incomplete in humans: up to one-third of X-chromosomal genes are expressed from both the active and inactive X chromosomes (Xa and Xi, respectively) in female cells, with the degree of 'escape' from inactivation varying between genes and individuals. The extent to which XCI is shared between cells and tissues remains poorly characterized, as does the degree to which incomplete XCI manifests as detectable sex differences in gene expression and phenotypic traits. Here we describe a systematic survey of XCI, integrating over 5,500 transcriptomes from 449 individuals spanning 29 tissues from GTEx (v6p release) and 940 single-cell transcriptomes, combined with genomic sequence data. We show that XCI at 683 X-chromosomal genes is generally uniform across human tissues, but identify examples of heterogeneity between tissues, individuals and cells. We show that incomplete XCI affects at least 23% of X-chromosomal genes, identify seven genes that escape XCI with support from multiple lines of evidence and demonstrate that escape from XCI results in sex biases in gene expression, establishing incomplete XCI as a mechanism that is likely to introduce phenotypic diversity. Overall, this updated catalogue of XCI across human tissues helps to increase our understanding of the extent and impact of the incompleteness in the maintenance of XCI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29022598 PMCID: PMC5685192 DOI: 10.1038/nature24265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962