We previously showed that genomic imprinting regulates matrix attachment region activities at the mouse Igf2 (insulinlike growth factor 2) locus and that these activities are functionally linked to neighboring differentially methylated regions (DMRs). Here, we investigate the similarly structured Dlk1/Gtl2 imprinted domain and show that in the mouse liver, the G/Crich intergenic germ line-derived DMR, a sequence involved in domain-wide imprinting, is highly retained within the nuclear matrix fraction exclusively on the methylated paternal copy, reflecting its differential function on that chromosome. Therefore, not only "classical" A/T-rich matrix attachment region (MAR) sequences but also other important regulatory DNA elements (such as DMRs) can be recovered from genomic MAR assays following a high salt treatment. Interestingly, the recovery of one A/T-rich sequence (MAR4) from the "nuclear matrix" fraction is strongly correlated with gene expression. We show that this element possesses an intrinsic activity that favors transcription, and using chromosome conformation capture quantitative real time PCR assays, we demonstrate that the MAR4 interacts with the intergenic germ line-derived DMR specifically on the paternal allele but not with the Dlk1/Gtl2 promoters. Altogether, our findings shed a new light on gene regulation at this locus.Genomic imprinting is a parent-of-origin gene-silencing mechanism required for normal mammalian development. It involves germ line-specific epigenetic modifications acquired on restricted regions of the genome (imprinting control region or element) that control the imprinting of several genes often over several hundred kilobase pairs. Accumulating evidence indicates that monoallelic expression at mammalian imprinted loci largely results from allele-specific higher order chromatin structures that impair or favor gene expression. In this context, it becomes crucial to elucidate the genomic architecture associated with imprinted genes as well as to identify DNA sequences and factors involved in such higher order chromatin organization. In the present work, we examine the potential role of the so-called matrix attachment regions (MARs) 3 in imprinting and gene regulation. MARs have been operationally defined in "in vitro MAR assays" by their ability to "attach" to a purified nuclear matrix or scaffold. In that context, they appear as A/T-rich DNA sequences that may be involved in chromatin structure and gene expression (1). They are frequently associated with enhancers and promote chromatin accessibility and histone acetylation. Using a "genomic MAR" assay based on high salt treatment of purified nucleus preparations (2, 3), we previously showed that parental genomic imprinting controls MAR activities at the mouse Igf2 (insulin-like growth factor 2) locus. That work indicated that tissue-specific MARs and differentially methylated regions (DMRs) may act as bipartite elements controlling the long range activity of other regulatory elements such as enhancers (3), thus contributing t...