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TADs: Topologically Associating Domains
Arrangement of the genome in 3D, within the nucleus

Recent findings reviewed in:Sikorska and Sexton (2020)

A TAD is a region of the genome in which the DNA (or chromatin) is folded up into a bunch of loops, in which transcriptional-regulatory elements & genes interact. TADs thus facilitate long-range promoter-enhancer interactions, effectively forming genomic regulatory blocks/regions (GRBs). The boundaries of TADs may restrict the influence of enhancers.

The region contained within a TAD may be transcriptionally active or inactive. It contains multiple DNA loops that are kept separate from neighbouring TADs by proteins such as CTCF and cohesin. Evidence now suggests that a genomic deletion can be pathogenic by removing a boundary element which then can bring a normally-inactive gene close to an active one (or vice versa), thus changing expression levels of the gene.
Further information can be obtained in the review by Beagan and Phillips-Cremins (2020) in Nature Genetics at: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-019-0561-1
Image (showing a TAD) accompanying the review mentioned above, by Sikorska and Sexton (2020) in Journal of Molecular Biology