TAD evolutionary and functional characterization reveals diversity in mammalian TAD boundary properties and function

Author:

Okhovat MariamORCID,VanCampen Jake,Nevonen Kimberly A.,Harshman Lana,Li Weiyu,Layman Cora E.,Ward Samantha,Herrera Jarod,Wells Jackson,Sheng Rory R.ORCID,Mao YafeiORCID,Ndjamen Blaise,Lima Ana C.ORCID,Vigh-Conrad Katinka A.,Stendahl Alexandra M.ORCID,Yang RanORCID,Fedorov Lev,Matthews Ian R.,Easow Sarah A.ORCID,Chan Dylan K.,Jan Taha A.ORCID,Eichler Evan E.,Rugonyi SandraORCID,Conrad Donald F.ORCID,Ahituv NadavORCID,Carbone LuciaORCID

Abstract

AbstractTopological associating domains (TADs) are self-interacting genomic units crucial for shaping gene regulation patterns. Despite their importance, the extent of their evolutionary conservation and its functional implications remain largely unknown. In this study, we generate Hi-C and ChIP-seq data and compare TAD organization across four primate and four rodent species and characterize the genetic and epigenetic properties of TAD boundaries in correspondence to their evolutionary conservation. We find 14% of all human TAD boundaries to be shared among all eight species (ultraconserved), while 15% are human-specific. Ultraconserved TAD boundaries have stronger insulation strength, CTCF binding, and enrichment of older retrotransposons compared to species-specific boundaries. CRISPR-Cas9 knockouts of an ultraconserved boundary in a mouse model lead to tissue-specific gene expression changes and morphological phenotypes. Deletion of a human-specific boundary near the autism-related AUTS2 gene results in the upregulation of this gene in neurons. Overall, our study provides pertinent TAD boundary evolutionary conservation annotations and showcases the functional importance of TAD evolution.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | NIH Office of the Director

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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