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The long-range interaction map of ribosomal DNA arrays

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2018

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Yu, Shoukai, and Bernardo Lemos. 2018. “The Long-Range Interaction Map of Ribosomal DNA Arrays.” Edited by Giovanni Bosco. PLOS Genetics 14 (3) (March 23): e1007258. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1007258.

Abstract

The repeated rDNA array gives rise to the nucleolus, an organelle that is central to cellular processes as varied as stress response, cell cycle regulation, RNA modification, cell metabolism, genome stability, and production of more than 70% of all cellular RNAs (the ribosomal RNAs). The rRNAs are produced from two sets of loci: the 5S rDNA array resides exclusively on human chromosome 1 while the 45S rDNA arrays reside on the short arm of five human acrocentric chromosomes. These critical genome elements have remained unassembled and have been excluded from all of the many Hi-C analyses to date. Here we built the first high resolution map of 5S and 45S rDNA array contacts with the rest of the genome combining over 15 billion Hi-C reads from several experiments. The data enabled sufficiently high coverage to map rDNA-genome interactions with <1MB resolution and identify rDNA-gene contacts. The map showed that the 5S and 45S arrays display preferential contact at common sites along the genome but are not themselves sufficiently close to yield 5S-45S Hi-C reads. Ribosomal DNA contacts are enriched in segments of closed, repressed, and late replicating chromatin, as well as CTCF binding sites. Finally, we identified categories whose dispersed genes coalesced in proximity to the rDNA arrays or instead avoided proximity with the rDNA arrays. The observations further our understanding of the spatial localization of rDNA arrays and their contribution to the architecture of the cell nucleus.

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long-range interaction, ribosomal DNA

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