Chromosomal clustering of muscle-expressed genes in Caenorhabditis elegans

PJ Roy, JM Stuart, J Lund, SK Kim - Nature, 2002 - nature.com
PJ Roy, JM Stuart, J Lund, SK Kim
Nature, 2002nature.com
Chromosomes are divided into domains of open chromatin, where genes have the potential
to be expressed, and domains of closed chromatin, where genes are not expressed. Classic
examples of open chromatin domains include 'puffs' on polytene chromosomes in
Drosophila and extended loops from lampbrush chromosomes,. If multiple genes were
typically expressed together from a single open chromatin domain, the position of co-
expressed genes along the chromosomes would appear clustered. To investigate whether …
Abstract
Chromosomes are divided into domains of open chromatin, where genes have the potential to be expressed, and domains of closed chromatin, where genes are not expressed. Classic examples of open chromatin domains include ‘puffs’ on polytene chromosomes in Drosophila and extended loops from lampbrush chromosomes,. If multiple genes were typically expressed together from a single open chromatin domain, the position of co-expressed genes along the chromosomes would appear clustered. To investigate whether co-expressed genes are clustered, we examined the chromosomal positions of the genes expressed in muscle of Caenorhabditis elegans at the first larval stage. Here we show that co-expressed genes in C. elegans are clustered in groups of 2–5 along the chromosomes, suggesting that expression from a chromatin domain can extend over several genes. These observations reveal a higher-order organization of the structure of the genome, in which the order of genes along the chromosome is correlated with their expression in specific tissues.
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