FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 5 , Pages 857-864, 4 March 2009

The long and the short of it: RNA-directed chromatin asymmetry in mammalian X-chromosome inactivation

Edited by Ulrike Kutay

  • Chandrasekhar Kanduri

      Affiliations

    • Department of Genetics and Pathology, Rudbeck Laboratory, Uppsala University, Dag Hammarskjölds Väg 20, 75185 Uppsala, Sweden
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Fax: +46 18558931.
  • ,
  • Joanne Whitehead

      Affiliations

    • Mechanics and Genetics of Embryonic and Tumoural Development, UMR168, Institut Curie/CNRS, 75005 Paris, France
  • ,
  • Faizaan Mohammad

      Affiliations

    • Department of Genetics and Pathology, Rudbeck Laboratory, Uppsala University, Dag Hammarskjölds Väg 20, 75185 Uppsala, Sweden

Received 16 October 2008; received in revised form 1 February 2009; accepted 2 February 2009. published online 11 February 2009.

Abstract 

Mammalian X-chromosome inactivation is controlled by a multilayered silencing pathway involving both short and long non-coding RNAs, which differentially recruit the epigenetic machinery to establish chromatin asymmetries. In response to developmentally regulated small RNAs, dicer, a key effector of RNA interference, locally silences Xist on the active X-chromosome and establishes the heterochromatin conformation along the silent X-chromosome. The 1.6kb RepA RNA initiates silencing by targeting the PRC2 polycomb complex to the inactive X-chromosome. In addition, the nuclear microenvironment is implicated in the initiation and maintenance of X-chromosome asymmetries. Here we review new findings involving these various RNA species in terms of understanding Xist gene regulation and the establishment of X-chromosome inactivation.

Keywords: X-chromosome inactivation, xiRNA, RNA interference, Chromatin, Xist, Tsix

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PII: S0014-5793(09)00102-1

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2009.02.004

FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 5 , Pages 857-864, 4 March 2009