Dissection of open chromatin domain formation by site-specific recombination in Drosophila

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Abstract

Drosophila polytene interphase chromosomes provide an ideal test system to study the rules that define the structure of chromatin domains. We established a transgenic condensed chromatin domain cassette for the insertion of large pieces of DNA by sitespecific recombination. Insertion of this cassette into open chromatin generated a condensed domain, visible as an extra band on polytene chromosomes. Site-specific recombination of DNA sequence variants into this ectopic band allowed us to compare their capacity for open chromatin formation by cytogenetic methods. We demonstrate that the 61C7-8 interband DNA maintains its open chromatin conformation and epigenetic state at an ectopic position. By deletion analysis, we mapped the sequences essential for open chromatin formation to a 490-bp fragment in the proximal part of the 17-kb interband sequence. This fragment overlaps binding sites for the chromatin protein Chriz (also known as Chro), the histone kinase Jil-1 and the boundary element protein CP190. It also overlaps a promoter region that locates between the Rev1 and Med30 transcription units. © 2014. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd | Journal of Cell Science.

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Zielke, T., & Saumweber, H. (2014). Dissection of open chromatin domain formation by site-specific recombination in Drosophila. Journal of Cell Science, 127(10), 2365–2375. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.147546

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