| Literature DB >> 34295901 |
Juan J Tena1, José M Santos-Pereira1.
Abstract
Animal genomes are folded in topologically associating domains (TADs) that have been linked to the regulation of the genes they contain by constraining regulatory interactions between cis-regulatory elements and promoters. Therefore, TADs are proposed as structural scaffolds for the establishment of regulatory landscapes (RLs). In this review, we discuss recent advances in the connection between TADs and gene regulation, their relationship with gene RLs and their dynamics during development and differentiation. Moreover, we describe how restructuring TADs may lead to pathological conditions, which explains their high evolutionary conservation, but at the same time it provides a substrate for the emergence of evolutionary innovations that lay at the origin of vertebrates and other phylogenetic clades.Entities:
Keywords: chromatin structure; evolution; evolutionary novelties; genetic diseases; regulatory landscapes; topologically associating domains
Year: 2021 PMID: 34295901 PMCID: PMC8290416 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.702787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Phenotypical outputs of regulatory landscapes rearrangements. (A) Similar rearrangements may lead to very different situations. In the two examples illustrated in this panel, the fusion of two adjacent TADs produces no detectable phenotype in the case of the Kcnj2/Sox9 locus (Despang et al., 2019), and a striking polydactylia phenotype in the case of the Ihh/Eph4a locus (Lupiáñez et al., 2015). (B) TAD restructuring can generate evolutionary innovations by gaining new regulatory inputs or by increasing regulatory complexity. An example is the splitting of the HoxD and HoxA ancestral TAD found in non-vertebrate chordates in two TADs that are vertebrate-specific and could favor the emergence of vertebrate appendages (Acemel et al., 2016). Black arrows, genes; colored rectangles, enhancers; colored arrows, productive enhancer-promoter interactions; dashed arrows, unproductive enhancer-promoter interactions; purple ellipses, TAD boundaries.