Publication | Closed Access
Integrated kinetics of X chromosome inactivation in differentiating embryonic stem cells
106
Citations
43
References
2002
Year
Histone ModificationsEpigenetic ChangeGeneticsCell SpecializationEpigeneticsEmbryologyX Inactivation ProcessStem CellsX InactivationCell DivisionGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationEmbryonic Stem CellsCell BiologyChromatinDevelopmental BiologyChromatin RemodelingX ChromosomeNatural SciencesEpigenomicsStem Cell ResearchChromosome BiologyX Chromosome InactivationMedicineEmbryonic Stem Cell
Inactivation of the X chromosome during early female development and the subsequent maintenance of this transcriptionally inert state through countless cell divisions remain a paradigm for epigenetic regulation in mammals. Nevertheless, the exact mechanisms underlying this chromosome-wide silencing process remain unclear. Using differentiating female embryonic stem (ES) cells as a model system, we recently found that histone H3 tail modifications are among the earliest known chromatin changes in the X inactivation process, appearing as soon as Xist RNA accumulates on the X chromosome, but prior to transcriptional silencing of X-linked genes (Heard et al., 2001). In this report we present an integrated analysis of the sequence of early events and chromatin modifications underlying X inactivation in differentiating female ES cells. We have extended our previous analysis concerning changes in histone tail modification states. We find that the hypomethylation of Arg-17 and that of Lys-36 on histone H3 also characterize the inactive X chromosome, and that these profiles show a similarly early onset during the initiation of X inactivation. In addition, we have investigated the kinetics of the shift in replication timing of the X chromosome undergoing inactivation. This event occurs slightly later than Xist RNA coating and the chromatin modifications. Finally, from an early stage in the X inactivation process, characteristic histone modification patterns can be found on the X chromosome at mitosis, suggesting that they represent true epigenetic marks of the inactive state.
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