B14 Argyris Papantonis
High mobility group B factors as regulators of genomic architecture via CTCF clustering
The control and reorganization of 3D chromatin architecture is implicated in development and disease. However, the intricacies of the structure-to-function relationship of mammalian genomes remain poorly understood. We present experimental evidence that the highly abundant chromatin-binders HMGB1 and HMGB2 demarcate higher-order “loop” domains of the human genome and that their loss upon replicative arrest induces the striking spatial clustering of CTCF. Thus, we propose that HMGB1/B2 assume a central role in whole-genome architecture and lay out an experimental plan to dissect their roles in both proliferating and terminally-differentiated primary human cells under native conditions.
Name | Argyris Papantonis |
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argyris.papantonis@uni-koeln.de | |
Telephone | +49-221-47896987 |