CAT7 and cat7l long non-coding rnas tune polycomb repressive complex 1 function during human and zebrafish development

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Abstract

The essential functions of polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) in development and gene silencing are thought to involve long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), but few specific lncRNAs that guide PRC1 activity are known. We screened for lncRNAs, which co-precipitate with PRC1 from chromatin and found candidates that impact polycomb group protein (PcG)-regulated gene expression in vivo. A novel lncRNA from this screen, CAT7, regulates expression and polycomb group binding at the MNX1 locus during early neuronal differentiation. CAT7 contains a unique tandem repeat domain that shares high sequence similarity to a non-syntenic zebrafish analog, cat7l. Defects caused by interference of cat7l RNA during zebrafish embryogenesis were rescued by human CAT7 RNA, enhanced by interference of a PRC1 component, and suppressed by interference of a known PRC1 target gene, demonstrating cat7l genetically interacts with a PRC1. We propose a model whereby PRC1 acts in concert with specific lncRNAs and that CAT7/cat7l represents convergent lncRNAs that independently evolved to tune PRC1 repression at individual loci.

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Ray, M. K., Wiskow, O., King, M. J., Ismail, N., Ergun, A., Wang, Y., … Kingston, R. E. (2016). CAT7 and cat7l long non-coding rnas tune polycomb repressive complex 1 function during human and zebrafish development. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 291(37), 19558–19572. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.730853

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