Chd8 regulates X chromosome inactivation in mouse through fine-tuning control of Xist expression

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Abstract

Female mammals achieve dosage compensation by inactivating one of their two X chromosomes during development, a process entirely dependent on Xist, an X-linked long non-coding RNA (lncRNA). At the onset of X chromosome inactivation (XCI), Xist is up-regulated and spreads along the future inactive X chromosome. Contextually, it recruits repressive histone and DNA modifiers that transcriptionally silence the X chromosome. Xist regulation is tightly coupled to differentiation and its expression is under the control of both pluripotency and epigenetic factors. Recent evidence has suggested that chromatin remodelers accumulate at the X Inactivation Center (XIC) and here we demonstrate a new role for Chd8 in Xist regulation in differentiating ES cells, linked to its control and prevention of spurious transcription factor interactions occurring within Xist regulatory regions. Our findings have a broader relevance, in the context of complex, developmentally-regulated gene expression.

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Cerase, A., Young, A. N., Ruiz, N. B., Buness, A., Sant, G. M., Arnold, M., … Avner, P. (2021). Chd8 regulates X chromosome inactivation in mouse through fine-tuning control of Xist expression. Communications Biology, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-01945-1

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