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Publication : An intergenic non-coding RNA promoter required for histone modifications in the human β-globin chromatin domain.

First Author  Debrand E Year  2019
Journal  PLoS One Volume  14
Issue  8 Pages  e0217532
PubMed ID  31412036 Mgi Jnum  J:278077
Mgi Id  MGI:6356147 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0217532
Citation  Debrand E, et al. (2019) An intergenic non-coding RNA promoter required for histone modifications in the human beta-globin chromatin domain. PLoS One 14(8):e0217532
abstractText  Transcriptome analyses show a surprisingly large proportion of the mammalian genome is transcribed; much more than can be accounted for by genes and introns alone. Most of this transcription is non-coding in nature and arises from intergenic regions, often overlapping known protein-coding genes in sense or antisense orientation. The functional relevance of this widespread transcription is unknown. Here we characterize a promoter responsible for initiation of an intergenic transcript located approximately 3.3 kb and 10.7 kb upstream of the adult-specific human beta-globin genes. Mutational analyses in beta-YAC transgenic mice show that alteration of intergenic promoter activity results in ablation of H3K4 di- and tri-methylation and H3 hyperacetylation extending over a 30 kb region immediately downstream of the initiation site, containing the adult delta- and beta-globin genes. This results in dramatically decreased expression of the adult genes through position effect variegation in which the vast majority of definitive erythroid cells harbor inactive adult globin genes. In contrast, expression of the neighboring epsilon- and gamma-globin genes is completely normal in embryonic erythroid cells, indicating a developmentally specific variegation of the adult domain. Our results demonstrate a role for intergenic non-coding RNA transcription in the propagation of histone modifications over chromatin domains and epigenetic control of beta-like globin gene transcription during development.
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