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Volume 30 Issue 8, August 2023

X-chromosome inactivation: insights from the active and inactive X chromosome

Three studies published in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology this month investigate the molecular mechanisms of dosage compensation in mammals. Collombet et al. find that during initiation of X-chromosome inactivation, Xist-driven compartmentalization of heterochromatin does not sequester transcribing RNA polymerase II. Poonperm et al. provide molecular insight into how the inactive X chromosome is reorganized to be replicated in late S phase. Rücklé et al. show that active X-derived transcripts appear to be less decorated with m6A and are more stable than autosomal mRNAs.

See Collombet et al. , Poonperm et al. and Rücklé et al.

Image Credit: Sabit Muhammad Subin / Alamy Stock Photo. Cover Design: Allen Beattie

Editorial

  • Understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms of dosage compensation and how cells equalize gene expression from the sex chromosomes has interested scientists for more than six decades. However, with so many questions still unanswered, the field continues to capture the attention of researchers.

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News & Views

  • Pioneer transcription factors access gene regulatory sites embedded within chromatin. They drive gene expression programs vital for cell fate decisions and cellular reprogramming, but how they engage nucleosomal sites at the molecular level is unclear. New results show that they engage histones and collaborate to overcome the nucleosome barrier.

    • Magdalena Murawska
    • Andreas G. Ladurner
    • Carla E. Margulies
    News & Views
  • Inactivation of one of the two female X chromosomes involves condensing it into a repressive subnuclear territory, which is depleted of transcriptional components and undergoes late-stage DNA replication. Two new studies unravel how compartmentalization of the inactive mammalian X chromosome affects transcription and DNA replication.

    • Frederic Zimmer
    • M. Felicia Basilicata
    • Claudia Isabelle Keller Valsecchi
    News & Views
  • Unlike autosomal genes, X-linked genes are expressed from only one copy in both male and female mammals. How cells increase X-linked gene expression to match autosomal levels is unclear. New evidence suggests that lower levels of RNA modifications on X chromosome-derived transcripts critically regulate mRNA stability and help to balance X-to-autosome gene expression levels.

    • Joanna W. Jachowicz
    News & Views
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Research Briefings

  • By studying the folding of chromosomes relative to nuclear bodies in single-cell models, we reveal specialized subnuclear microenvironments linked to specific gene functions. Our models provide insights into a variety of structural features of the genome and unveil key structure–function correlations.

    Research Briefing
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