Chromatin signature of widespread monoallelic expression

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Abstract

In mammals, numerous autosomal genes are subject to mitotically stable monoallelic expression (MAE), including genes that play critical roles in a variety of human diseases. Due to challenges posed by the clonal nature of MAE, very little is known about its regulation; in particular, no molecular features have been specifically linked to MAE. In this study, we report an approach that distinguishes MAE genes in human cells with great accuracy: a chromatin signature consisting of chromatin marks associated with active transcription (H3K36me3) and silencing (H3K27me3) simultaneously occurring in the gene body. The MAE signature is present in ~20% of ubiquitously expressed genes and over 30% of tissue-specific genes across cell types. Notably, it is enriched among key developmental genes that have bivalent chromatin structure in pluripotent cells. Our results open a new approach to the study of MAE that is independent of polymorphisms, and suggest that MAE is linked to cell differentiation. © Nag et al.

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Nag, A., Savova, V., Fung, H. L., Miron, A., Yuan, G. C., Zhang, K., & Gimelbrant, A. A. (2013). Chromatin signature of widespread monoallelic expression. ELife, 2013(2). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01256

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