Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation

Abstract Background The human genome is hierarchically organized into local and long-range structures that help shape cell-type-specific transcription patterns. Transfer RNA (tRNA) genes (tDNAs), which are transcribed by RNA polymerase III (RNAPIII) and encode RNA molecules responsible for translati...

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Main Authors: Kevin Van Bortle, Douglas H. Phanstiel, Michael P. Snyder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-09-01
Series:Genome Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13059-017-1310-3
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spelling doaj-a0d62565df354eec80d90fab7141c26f2020-11-24T21:47:19ZengBMCGenome Biology1474-760X2017-09-0118111810.1186/s13059-017-1310-3Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiationKevin Van Bortle0Douglas H. Phanstiel1Michael P. Snyder2Department of Genetics, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of North CarolinaDepartment of Genetics, Stanford UniversityAbstract Background The human genome is hierarchically organized into local and long-range structures that help shape cell-type-specific transcription patterns. Transfer RNA (tRNA) genes (tDNAs), which are transcribed by RNA polymerase III (RNAPIII) and encode RNA molecules responsible for translation, are dispersed throughout the genome and, in many cases, linearly organized into genomic clusters with other tDNAs. Whether the location and three-dimensional organization of tDNAs contribute to the activity of these genes has remained difficult to address, due in part to unique challenges related to tRNA sequencing. We therefore devised integrated tDNA expression profiling, a method that combines RNAPIII mapping with biotin-capture of nascent tRNAs. We apply this method to the study of dynamic tRNA gene regulation during macrophage development and further integrate these data with high-resolution maps of 3D chromatin structure. Results Integrated tDNA expression profiling reveals domain-level and loop-based organization of tRNA gene transcription during cellular differentiation. tRNA genes connected by DNA loops, which are proximal to CTCF binding sites and expressed at elevated levels compared to non-loop tDNAs, change coordinately with tDNAs and protein-coding genes at distal ends of interactions mapped by in situ Hi-C. We find that downregulated tRNA genes are specifically marked by enhanced promoter-proximal binding of MAF1, a transcriptional repressor of RNAPIII activity, altogether revealing multiple levels of tDNA regulation during cellular differentiation. Conclusions We present evidence of both local and coordinated long-range regulation of human tDNA expression, suggesting the location and organization of tRNA genes contribute to dynamic tDNA activity during macrophage development.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13059-017-1310-3tDNAtRNAomeHi-CBiotin-captureCTCFTopologically associating domains
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kevin Van Bortle
Douglas H. Phanstiel
Michael P. Snyder
spellingShingle Kevin Van Bortle
Douglas H. Phanstiel
Michael P. Snyder
Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
Genome Biology
tDNA
tRNAome
Hi-C
Biotin-capture
CTCF
Topologically associating domains
author_facet Kevin Van Bortle
Douglas H. Phanstiel
Michael P. Snyder
author_sort Kevin Van Bortle
title Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
title_short Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
title_full Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
title_fullStr Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
title_full_unstemmed Topological organization and dynamic regulation of human tRNA genes during macrophage differentiation
title_sort topological organization and dynamic regulation of human trna genes during macrophage differentiation
publisher BMC
series Genome Biology
issn 1474-760X
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract Background The human genome is hierarchically organized into local and long-range structures that help shape cell-type-specific transcription patterns. Transfer RNA (tRNA) genes (tDNAs), which are transcribed by RNA polymerase III (RNAPIII) and encode RNA molecules responsible for translation, are dispersed throughout the genome and, in many cases, linearly organized into genomic clusters with other tDNAs. Whether the location and three-dimensional organization of tDNAs contribute to the activity of these genes has remained difficult to address, due in part to unique challenges related to tRNA sequencing. We therefore devised integrated tDNA expression profiling, a method that combines RNAPIII mapping with biotin-capture of nascent tRNAs. We apply this method to the study of dynamic tRNA gene regulation during macrophage development and further integrate these data with high-resolution maps of 3D chromatin structure. Results Integrated tDNA expression profiling reveals domain-level and loop-based organization of tRNA gene transcription during cellular differentiation. tRNA genes connected by DNA loops, which are proximal to CTCF binding sites and expressed at elevated levels compared to non-loop tDNAs, change coordinately with tDNAs and protein-coding genes at distal ends of interactions mapped by in situ Hi-C. We find that downregulated tRNA genes are specifically marked by enhanced promoter-proximal binding of MAF1, a transcriptional repressor of RNAPIII activity, altogether revealing multiple levels of tDNA regulation during cellular differentiation. Conclusions We present evidence of both local and coordinated long-range regulation of human tDNA expression, suggesting the location and organization of tRNA genes contribute to dynamic tDNA activity during macrophage development.
topic tDNA
tRNAome
Hi-C
Biotin-capture
CTCF
Topologically associating domains
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13059-017-1310-3
work_keys_str_mv AT kevinvanbortle topologicalorganizationanddynamicregulationofhumantrnagenesduringmacrophagedifferentiation
AT douglashphanstiel topologicalorganizationanddynamicregulationofhumantrnagenesduringmacrophagedifferentiation
AT michaelpsnyder topologicalorganizationanddynamicregulationofhumantrnagenesduringmacrophagedifferentiation
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