The biological significance of nuclear scaffold/matrix-attachment regions (S/MARs) remains a topic of long-standing interest. The key to understanding S/MAR behavior relies on determining the physical attributes of in vivo S/MARs and whether they serve as rigid or flexible chromatin loop anchors. To analyze S/MAR behavior, single and multiple copies of the S/MAR-containing constructs were introduced into various host genomes of transgenic mice and transfected cell lines. These in vivo integration events provided a system to study the association and integration patterns of each introduced S/MAR. By utilizing FISH to visualize directly the localization of S/MARs on the nuclear matrix or chromatin loop, we were able to assign specific attributes to the S/MAR. Surprisingly, when multiple-copy S/MARs were introduced they were selected and used as nuclear matrix anchors in a discriminatory manner, even though they all contained identical primary sequences. This selection process was probably mediated by S/MAR availability including binding strength and copy number, as reflected by the expression profiles and association of multi-copy tandem inserted constructs. Whereas S/MARs functioned as the mediators of loop attachment, they were used in a selective and dynamic fashion. Consequently, S/MAR anchors were necessary but not sufficient for chromatin loops to form. These observations reconcile many seemingly contradictory attributes previously associated with S/MARs.
Chromatin loops are selectively anchored using scaffold/matrix-attachment regions Available to Purchase
Henry H. Q. Heng, Sandra Goetze, Christine J. Ye, Guo Liu, Joshua B. Stevens, Steven W. Bremer, Susan M. Wykes, Juergen Bode, Stephen A. Krawetz; Chromatin loops are selectively anchored using scaffold/matrix-attachment regions. J Cell Sci 1 March 2004; 117 (7): 999–1008. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.00976
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