Constitutive heterochromatin
![C-banding of a human female karyotype showing constitutive heterochromatin[1]](/uploads/202501/06/C-banding3106.gif)
![Possible models for expression of genes found in constitutive heterochromatin.[5]](/uploads/202501/06/Gene_expression_heterochromatin3106.jpg)
Constitutive heterochromatin domains are regions of DNA found throughout the chromosomes of eukaryotes. The majority of constitutive heterochromatin is found at the pericentromeric regions of chromosomes, but is also found at the telomeres and throughout the chromosomes. In humans there is significantly more constitutive heterochromatin found on chromosomes 1, 9, 16, 19 and on the Y chromosome. Constitutive heterochromatin is composed mainly of high copy number tandem repeats known as satellite repeats, minisatellite and microsatellite repeats, and transposon repeats. In humans these regions account for about 200Mb or 6.5% of the total human genome, but their repeat composition has made it difficult to sequence so only small regions have been sequenced. The Y chromosome is an exception in that it has been sequenced because its repeats do not cause difficulties in finding overlapping regions that are needed for sequencing.