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Chromosome TopologyOrganizing Genes by Loops and BoundsCraig S. Pikaardaa Biology Department, Washington University Campus Box 1137, One Brookings Drive St. Louis, MO 63130 pikaard@biodec.wustl.edu Suppose that you have several kilometers of very fine thread and must find a way to fit it inside a sphere the size of a golf ball. The thread cannot be packed too tightly because all points along its length must be accessible. Your packaging plan must also accommodate the need to unravel and repack the thread repeatedly without it becoming hopelessly tangled. This hypothetical engineering problem should elicit an appreciation for the packaging of chromosomal DNA into a eukaryotic nucleus, a task which requires that DNA be compacted in length as much as 10- to 50,000-fold while maintaining a form that accommodates transcription and replication.
How DNA is packaged into chromatin and chromosomes is not entirely clear, especially at the highest levels of organization. However, certain aspects are fairly well understood. The first step is the assembly of DNA into nucleosomal arrays. When viewed under the electron microscope, these arrays have the appearance of beads 10 nm in diameter distributed along a 2-nm DNA string (
Our understanding of levels of organization beyond the 30-nm filaments is more sketchy, but current models derive from the stunning electron micrographs of Laemmli and colleagues, which were published in the late 1970s (
These observations led to the formal "radial loop model" for chromosome organization in which adjacent loop attachment sites are arranged in a helical spiral along the long axis of the metaphase scaffold (
We know less about the organization of interphase chromosomes. This is primarily because interphase chromatin tends to be dispersed throughout the nucleus and is therefore more difficult to see. Exceptions include the giant "lampbrush" chromosomes of amphibian oocytes. These chromosomes consist of highly elongated sister chromatids, which remain attached to each other by multiple chiasmata in a prolonged meiotic interphase that can last for months (
The similarity between the loop-and-scaffold structures of lampbrush and metaphase chromosomes is striking, suggesting the generality of this organization for both transcriptionally active and inactive chromosomes. However, in interphase cells of species that do not have lampbrush chromosomes, evidence for a loop-and-scaffold-like arrangement is less direct. In such cells, removal of histones with high salt or ionic detergents yields a proteinaceous "nuclear matrix," which includes part of the nuclear envelope, a weblike nucleoskeleton, and a remnant of the nucleolus (
Whether or not there is a direct relationship between the structural organization of chromosomal DNA into loops and the functional subdivision of the genome into regulatory domains is an important and largely open question. Considerable effort has been focused on mapping scaffold or matrix attachment regions (SARs or MARs) relative to known genes (e.g.,
Another method for mapping SARs/MARs is to generate matrix preparations that are free of all contaminating nucleic acid, add exogenous DNA fragments from the cloned gene of interest, and identify those sequences which, because they bind to the matrix, can be recovered by centrifugation. In some cases, these different assays identify the same DNA fragments, but in other cases they do not. Different results are also obtained for matrices prepared using high-salt extraction (e.g., 2M NaCl), ionic detergents (e.g., lithium diiodosalicylate) coupled with heat treatment, or treatment of agarose-encapsulated cells with non-ionic detergents under isotonic conditions (for a review, see
Despite their differences, these studies all indicate that attachment sites tend to be AT rich and that they are preferred binding sites for topoisomerase II (Topo II), which is one of the major scaffold proteins (
Other evidence to suggest that genes are functionally compartmentalized into regulatory domains demarcated by "boundary" or "insulator elements" has accumulated (
Initial evidence that MARs/SARs might fulfill the requirements of boundary elements came from studies using matrix-associated elements that mapped to the borders of a 20-kb DNase hypersensitive region surrounding and including the chicken lysozyme gene (
However, MARs/SARs do not always coincide with boundary/insulator elements. For example,
Other domain boundary elements have been shown to play a role in the regulation of complex loci containing multiple genes. These loci include the bithorax homeotic gene complex in Drosophila and the vertebrate ß-globin gene locus. In the case of the bithorax locus, multiple boundary elements play a role in restricting the domains responsible for the orchestrated expression or silencing of individual genes within the locus (
Like scs elements and MARs/SARs, and indicative of a distinct chromatin structure, the LCR is characterized by regions of DNase hypersensitivity. Importantly, sequences within the LCR have been shown to have the ability to protect transgenes from position effects in transformed vertebrate cells and Drosophila (
Finally, two good examples of silenced domains are provided by the yeast silent mating-type loci, which contain repressed genes that are otherwise fully functional (
Despite the flurry of investigations described above, relatively little is known about the structural or functional organization of chromosomal DNA in plants. On pages 13491359 of this issue, Paul and Ferl take one of the first steps in defining the chromosomal environment encompassing specific plant genes. By focusing on DNA rather than MARs/SARs, a conceptual approach pioneered by Razin and colleagues (reviewed in Support for Paul and Ferl's hypothesis comes from their experiments showing that similar sized fragments are also released by chemicals that facilitate DNA cleavage by Topo II without allowing DNA religation by the same enzyme. These data are significant because Topo II is thought to be enriched at the base of the DNA loops, where it may function to relieve the torsional strains inherent to replication and transcription and/or DNA compaction during mitosis.
Several predictions can be derived from the hypothesis advanced by Paul and Ferl. Most importantly, Topo II and DNase I cleavages sites should colocalize and should map at or near MARs/SARs, as Razin and colleagues have shown in their studies of the Drosophila X chromosome ( The relationship between gene function and chromosome organization is one of several areas where plants, aided by robust genome projects, should provide particularly useful model systems. The order of genes along a chromosome is unlikely to be random or a historical accident but is, instead, likely to be shaped by natural selection. It would be efficient to group genes best suited to similar chromatin environments, such as genes that tend to be highly methylated (e.g., the rRNA genes studied in my laboratory), genes that replicate early or late, and genes that can utilize common LCRs or other regulatory regions. Clearly, understanding how chromosome structure and gene functions are interrelated is a challenging subfield of functional genomics. Paul and Ferl's studies should serve as a useful starting point in an area that is poised for further investigation and that is certain to yield important new discoveries in the near future.
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