- Guo, Ya;
- Xu, Quan;
- Canzio, Daniele;
- Shou, Jia;
- Li, Jinhuan;
- Gorkin, David U;
- Jung, Inkyung;
- Wu, Haiyang;
- Zhai, Yanan;
- Tang, Yuanxiao;
- Lu, Yichao;
- Wu, Yonghu;
- Jia, Zhilian;
- Li, Wei;
- Zhang, Michael Q;
- Ren, Bing;
- Krainer, Adrian R;
- Maniatis, Tom;
- Wu, Qiang
CTCF and the associated cohesin complex play a central role in insulator function and higher-order chromatin organization of mammalian genomes. Recent studies identified a correlation between the orientation of CTCF-binding sites (CBSs) and chromatin loops. To test the functional significance of this observation, we combined CRISPR/Cas9-based genomic-DNA-fragment editing with chromosome-conformation-capture experiments to show that the location and relative orientations of CBSs determine the specificity of long-range chromatin looping in mammalian genomes, using protocadherin (Pcdh) and β-globin as model genes. Inversion of CBS elements within the Pcdh enhancer reconfigures the topology of chromatin loops between the distal enhancer and target promoters and alters gene-expression patterns. Thus, although enhancers can function in an orientation-independent manner in reporter assays, in the native chromosome context, the orientation of at least some enhancers carrying CBSs can determine both the architecture of topological chromatin domains and enhancer/promoter specificity. These findings reveal how 3D chromosome architecture can be encoded by linear genome sequences.