Publication | Open Access
Single-Cell Analysis Reveals Partial Reactivation of X Chromosome instead of Chromosome-wide Dampening in Naive Human Pluripotent Stem Cells
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Citations
16
References
2020
Year
GeneticsAdult Stem CellReproductive BiologyX Chromosome DampeningEpigeneticsChromosome-wide DampeningPreimplantation EmbryosStem CellsXenotransplantationChromosomal RearrangementCell BiologyChromatinInduced Pluripotent Stem CellDevelopmental BiologyX ChromosomeStem Cell ResearchHuman Embryonic DevelopmentMedicineEmbryonic Stem Cell
Recently, a unique form of X chromosome dosage compensation has been demonstrated in human preimplantation embryos, which happens through the dampening of X-linked gene expression from both X chromosomes. Subsequently, X chromosome dampening has also been demonstrated in female human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) during the transition from primed to naive state. However, the existence of dampened X chromosomes in both embryos and hPSCs remains controversial. Specifically, in preimplantation embryos it has been shown that there is inactivation of X chromosome instead of dampening. Here, we performed allelic analysis of X-linked genes at the single-cell level in hPSCs and found that there is partial reactivation of the inactive X chromosome instead of chromosome-wide dampening upon conversion from primed to naive state. In addition, our analysis suggests that the reduced X-linked gene expression in naive hPSCs might be the consequence of erasure of active X chromosome upregulation.
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