Abstract

Genetic and epigenetic inheritance through mitosis is critical for dividing cells to maintain their state. This process occurs in the context of large-scale re-organization of chromosome conformation during prophase leading to the formation of mitotic chromosomes, and during the reformation of the interphase nucleus during telophase and early G1. This review highlights how recent studies over the last 5 years employing chromosome conformation capture combined with classical models of chromosome organization based on decades of microscopic observations, are providing new insights into the three-dimensional organization of chromatin inside the interphase nucleus and within mitotic chromosomes. One striking observation is that interphase genome organization displays cell type-specific features that are related to cell type-specific gene expression, whereas mitotic chromosome folding appears universal and tissue invariant. This raises the question of whether or not there is a need for an epigenetic memory for genome folding. Herein, the two different folding states of mammalian genomes are reviewed and then models are discussed wherein instructions for cell type-specific genome folding are locally encoded in the linear genome and transmitted through mitosis, e.g., as open chromatin sites with or without continuous binding of transcription factors. In the next cell cycle these instructions are used to re-assemble protein complexes on regulatory elements which then drive three-dimensional folding of the genome from the bottom up through local action and self-assembly into higher order levels of cell type-specific organization. In this model, no explicit epigenetic memory for cell type-specific chromosome folding is required.

Highlights

  • Genetic and epigenetic inheritance through mitosis is critical for dividing cells to maintain their state

  • Understanding how chromosomes are organized in different cells and across the cell cycle is interesting by itself, but it may shed light on a basic question at the heart of epigenetics, which is whether and how information regarding cell types and gene expression patterns can be stably transmitted through mitosis and whether any cell type-specific chromosome organizational features are, or need to be, inherited

  • This article reviewed the many studies performed over the years focusing on the contributions of chromosome conformation capture that have led to important insights into the two ways cells fold their genome during the cell cycle

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Summary

Conclusions

This article reviewed the many studies performed over the years focusing on the contributions of chromosome conformation capture that have led to important insights into the two ways cells fold their genome during the cell cycle. The model implies that looping interactions between promoters and enhancers only require locally bound complexes, and that TADs are important for limiting which promoter-enhancer pairings occur. The self-assembly model for nuclear organization and the resultant high cell-to-cell variability at the scale of compartments suggest that these higher order structures are not involved in determining robust cell type-specific gene expression in all cells in the population. This proposal makes clear predictions related to the order of events in early G1 and the roles of specific DNA elements and protein machineries that can be tested by using synchronous cell cultures, chromatin interaction, and imaging methods, as well as more recently developed genome engineering approaches. Competing interests The author declares that he has no competing interests

Misteli T
10. Misteli T
15. Belmont AS
19. Flemming W
22. ENCODE-Project-Consortium
54. Davies HG

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