학술논문

A map of human PRDM9 binding provides evidence for novel behaviors of PRDM9 and other zinc-finger proteins in meiosis
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Biotechnology
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Generic health relevance
Binding Sites
Chromosome Mapping
DNA
HEK293 Cells
Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase
Homologous Recombination
Humans
Meiosis
Protein Binding
Protein Multimerization
KRAB
PRDM9
chromosomes
evolutionary biology
genes
genomics
human
meiosis
recombination
transposable elements
zinc finger protein
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
PRDM9 binding localizes almost all meiotic recombination sites in humans and mice. However, most PRDM9-bound loci do not become recombination hotspots. To explore factors that affect binding and subsequent recombination outcomes, we mapped human PRDM9 binding sites in a transfected human cell line and measured PRDM9-induced histone modifications. These data reveal varied DNA-binding modalities of PRDM9. We also find that human PRDM9 frequently binds promoters, despite their low recombination rates, and it can activate expression of a small number of genes including CTCFL and VCX. Furthermore, we identify specific sequence motifs that predict consistent, localized meiotic recombination suppression around a subset of PRDM9 binding sites. These motifs strongly associate with KRAB-ZNF protein binding, TRIM28 recruitment, and specific histone modifications. Finally, we demonstrate that, in addition to binding DNA, PRDM9's zinc fingers also mediate its multimerization, and we show that a pair of highly diverged alleles preferentially form homo-multimers.