Abstract
Meiotic recombination is a driver of evolution, and aberrant recombination is a major contributor to aneuploidy in mammals. Mechanism of recombination remains elusive yet. Here, we present a computational analysis to explore recombination-related dynamics of chromatin accessibility in mouse primordial germ cells (PGCs). Our data reveals that: (1) recombination hotspots which get accessible at meiosis-specific DNase I-hypersensitive sites (DHSs) only when PGCs enter meiosis are located preferentially in intronic and distal intergenic regions; (2) stable DHSs maintained stably across PGC differentiation are enriched by CTCF motifs and CTCF binding and mediate chromatin loop formation; (3) compared with the specific DHSs aroused at meiotic stage, stable DHSs are largely encoded in DNA sequence and also enriched by epigenetic marks; (4) PRDM9 is likely to target nucleosome-occupied hotspot regions and remodels local chromatin structure to make them accessible for recombination machinery; and (5) cells undergoing meiotic recombination are deficient in TAD structure and chromatin loop arrays are organized regularly along the axis formed between homologous chromosomes. Taken together, by analyzing DHS-related DNA features, epigenetic marks and 3D genome structure, we revealed some specific roles of chromatin accessibility in recombination, which would expand our understanding of recombination mechanism.
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More From: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms
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