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Dosage differences of X-linked genes between male and female mammals are compensated for by a mechanism known as X-inactivation, and the noncoding Xist gene plays a crucial role in this process. The expression of Xist is regulated in cis by its noncoding antisense gene, Tsix, whose transcripts (though a fraction of them stay unspliced), are processed like common protein-coding RNAs. It has been suggested that certain classes of sense-antisense pairs of RNA are causally involved in not only gene regulation but also higher order chromatin structure in various organisms. In fact, recent studies demonstrated that Tsix modulates Xist expression through modification of the chromatin structure. It is still unknown, however, whether the RNA product is important for the function of Tsix or whether the antisense transcription is sufficient. To obtain insight into this issue, we eliminated the splicing products of Tsix in the mouse and explored the effects of this elimination on Tsix-mediated Xist silencing. To our surprise, the Xist locus was stably repressed on the X carrying the splicing-defective Tsix allele. Moreover, the repressive chromatin configuration was properly established at the Xist locus. These unexpected results indicate that the splicing products are dispensable for Tsix-mediated Xist silencing.
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Development ePress online publication date 15 Nov 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02670
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Tsix defective in splicing is competent to establish Xist silencing
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: tsado{at}lab.nig.ac.jp)
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Y. Hoki, N. Kimura, M. Kanbayashi, Y. Amakawa, T. Ohhata, H. Sasaki, and T. Sado
A proximal conserved repeat in the Xist gene is essential as a genomic element for X-inactivation in mouse
Development,
January 1, 2009;
136(1):
139 - 146.
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T. Ohhata, Y. Hoki, H. Sasaki, and T. Sado
Crucial role of antisense transcription across the Xist promoter in Tsix-mediated Xist chromatin modification
Development,
January 15, 2008;
135(2):
227 - 235.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2006