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Chromosome Territories
Authors:Thomas Cremer and  Marion Cremer
Institution:1Biozentrum, Department of Biology II (Chair of Anthropology and Human Genetics), Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Grosshadernerstrasse 2, 82152 Martinsried, Germany;2Munich Center for Integrated Protein Sciences (CIPSM), 81377 Munich, Germany
Abstract:Chromosome territories (CTs) constitute a major feature of nuclear architecture. In a brief statement, the possible contribution of nuclear architecture studies to the field of epigenomics is considered, followed by a historical account of the CT concept and the final compelling experimental evidence of a territorial organization of chromosomes in all eukaryotes studied to date. Present knowledge of nonrandom CT arrangements, of the internal CT architecture, and of structural interactions with other CTs is provided as well as the dynamics of CT arrangements during cell cycle and postmitotic terminal differentiation. The article concludes with a discussion of open questions and new experimental strategies to answer them.Impressive progress has been achieved during the last decade with regard to the functional implications of DNA methylation, histone modifications, and chromatin remodeling events for gene regulation (Fuks 2005; Kouzarides 2007; Maier et al. 2008; Jiang and Pugh 2009). It has, however, also become obvious that decoding the chromatin language does not suffice to fully understand the ways in which the diploid genome contributes to the formation of the different epigenomes present in the various cell types of a multicellular organism.Different epigenomes and their functional implications also depend on differences in higher‐order chromatin organization and nuclear architecture at large. Epigenomic research aims for an integrated understanding of the structural and functional aspects of epigenetics with nuclear architecture during the differentiation of toti- or pluripotent cells to functionally distinct cell types.The territorial organization of chromosomes in interphase (chromosome territories, CTs) constitutes a basic feature of nuclear architecture. This article starts with a brief historical account of the CT concept and the compelling experimental evidence in favor of a territorial organization of chromosomes in all eukaryotes studied to date. A survey of what is presently known about nonrandom arrangements of CTs, about changes of such arrangements in cycling cells as a result of internal or external influences and about the internal architecture of CTs and their structural interactions with each other is provided. The article concludes with a discussion of open questions on CT organization and new experimental strategies to answer them.
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