A disproportionate impact of G9a methyltransferase deficiency on the X chromosome

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Abstract

G9a is a histone methyltransferase responsible for the dimethylation of histone H3 at lysine 9 (H3K9me2). G9a plays key roles in transcriptional silencing of developmentally regulated genes, but its role in X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) has been under debate. Here, we uncover a female-specific function of G9a and demonstrate that deleting G9a has a disproportionate impact on the X chromosome relative to the rest of the genome. G9a deficiency causes a failure of XCI and female-specific hypersensitivity to drug inhibition of H3K9me2. We showthat G9a interacts with Tsix and Xist RNAs, and that competitive inhibition of the G9a-RNA interaction recapitulates the XCI defect. During XCI, Xist recruits G9a to silence X-linked genes on the future inactive X. In parallel on the future Xa, Tsix recruits G9a to silence Xist in cis. Thus, RNA tethers G9a for allele-specific targeting of the H3K9me2 modification and the G9a-RNA interaction is essential for XCI.

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APA

Szanto, A., Aguilar, R., Kesner, B., Blum, R., Wang, D., Cifuentes-Rojas, C., … Lee, J. T. (2021). A disproportionate impact of G9a methyltransferase deficiency on the X chromosome. Genes and Development, 35(13), 1035–1054. https://doi.org/10.1101/GAD.337592.120

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