Abstract

Homologous sets of transcription factors direct conserved tissue-specific gene expression, yet transcription factor–binding events diverge rapidly between closely related species. We used hepatocytes from an aneuploid mouse strain carrying human chromosome 21 to determine, on a chromosomal scale, whether interspecies differences in transcriptional regulation are primarily directed by human genetic sequence or mouse nuclear environment. Virtually all transcription factor–binding locations, landmarks of transcription initiation, and the resulting gene expression observed in human hepatocytes were recapitulated across the entire human chromosome 21 in the mouse hepatocyte nucleus. Thus, in homologous tissues, genetic sequence is largely responsible for directing transcriptional programs; interspecies differences in epigenetic machinery, cellular environment, and transcription factors themselves play secondary roles.

Keywords

BiologyTranscription factorGeneticsGeneHomologous chromosomeTranscription (linguistics)TCF4EpigeneticsTAF2EnhancerSp3 transcription factorGene expressionRegulation of gene expressionCell biology

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBase SequenceCell NucleusChromatin Assembly and DisassemblyChromatin ImmunoprecipitationChromosomesHumanPair 21Disease ModelsAnimalDown SyndromeGene Expression RegulationHepatocyte Nuclear FactorsHepatocytesHistonesHumansMethylationMiceOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisRegulatory SequencesNucleic AcidSpecies SpecificityTranscription Initiation SiteTranscriptionGenetic

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
322
Issue
5900
Pages
434-438
Citations
292
Access
Closed

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Citation Metrics

292
OpenAlex
7
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252
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Cite This

Michael D. Wilson, Nuno L. Barbosa‐Morais, Dominic Schmidt et al. (2008). Species-Specific Transcription in Mice Carrying Human Chromosome 21. Science , 322 (5900) , 434-438. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1160930

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1160930
PMID
18787134
PMCID
PMC3717767

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%