Genomic positional conservation identifies topological anchor point RNAs linked to developmental loci
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2018Metadata
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Amaral, Paulo P.
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Genomic positional conservation identifies topological anchor point RNAs linked to developmental loci
Author
- Amaral, Paulo P.;
- Leonardi, Tommaso;
- Han, Namshik;
- Vire, Emmanuelle;
- Gascoigne, Dennis K.;
- Arias Carrasco, Raúl;
- Buscher, Magdalena;
- Pandolfini, Luca;
- Zhang, Anda;
- Pluchino, Stefano;
- Maracaja Coutinho, Vinicius;
- Nakaya, Helder I.;
- Hemberg, Martin;
- Shiekhattar, Ramin;
- Enright, Anton J.;
- Kouzarides, Tony;
Abstract
Background: The mammalian genome is transcribed into large numbers of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), but the definition of functional lncRNA groups has proven difficult, partly due to their low sequence conservation and lack of identified shared properties. Here we consider promoter conservation and positional conservation as indicators of functional commonality.
Results: We identify 665 conserved lncRNA promoters in mouse and human that are preserved in genomic position relative to orthologous coding genes. These positionally conserved lncRNA genes are primarily associated with developmental transcription factor loci with which they are coexpressed in a tissue-specific manner. Over half of positionally conserved RNAs in this set are linked to chromatin organization structures, overlapping binding sites for the CTCF chromatin organiser and located at chromatin loop anchor points and borders of topologically associating domains (TADs). We define these RNAs as topological anchor point RNAs (tapRNAs). Characterization of these noncoding RNAs and their associated coding genes shows that they are functionally connected: they regulate each other's expression and influence the metastatic phenotype of cancer cells in vitro in a similar fashion. Furthermore, we find that tapRNAs contain conserved sequence domains that are enriched in motifs for zinc finger domain-containing RNA-binding proteins and transcription factors, whose binding sites are found mutated in cancers.
Conclusions: This work leverages positional conservation to identify lncRNAs with potential importance in genome organization, development and disease. The evidence that many developmental transcription factors are physically and functionally connected to lncRNAs represents an exciting stepping-stone to further our understanding of genome regulation.
Patrocinador
Cancer Research UK
C6/A18796
C6946/A14492
European Research Council CRIPTON Grant
268569
University of Cambridge
FAPESP
2014/50308-4
Wellcome Trust
092096
PAI-CONICYT grant
PAI79170021
FONDECYT-CONICYT grant
11161020
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Genome Biology (2018) 19:32
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