Publication

Dynamics of genome reorganization during human cardiogenesis reveal an RBM20-dependent splicing factory.

current
   June 28th, 2019 at 1:29pm

Overview


Abstract

Functional changes in spatial genome organization during human development are poorly understood. Here we report a comprehensive profile of nuclear dynamics during human cardiogenesis from pluripotent stem cells by integrating Hi-C, RNA-seq and ATAC-seq. While chromatin accessibility and gene expression show complex on/off dynamics, large-scale genome architecture changes are mostly unidirectional. Many large cardiac genes transition from a repressive to an active compartment during differentiation, coincident with upregulation. We identify a network of such gene loci that increase their association inter-chromosomally, and are targets of the muscle-specific splicing factor RBM20. Genome editing studies show that TTN pre-mRNA, the main RBM20-regulated transcript in the heart, nucleates RBM20 foci that drive spatial proximity between the TTN locus and other inter-chromosomal RBM20 targets such as CACNA1C and CAMK2D. This mechanism promotes RBM20-dependent alternative splicing of the resulting transcripts, indicating the existence of a cardiac-specific trans-interacting chromatin domain (TID) functioning as a splicing factory.

Authors

Bertero A  •  Fields PA  •  Ramani V  •  Bonora G  •  Yardimci GG  •  Reinecke H  •  Pabon L  •  Noble WS  •  Shendure J  •  Murry CE

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30948719


Journal

Nature communications

PMID:30948719

Published

April 4th, 2019