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Chromatin organization by an interplay of loop extrusion and compartmental segregation

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Nubler, Johannes
Imakaev, Maksim Viktorovich
Abdennur, Nezar Alexander
Mirny, Leonid A
Fudenberg, Geoffrey
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Nubler, Johannes
Imakaev, Maksim Viktorovich
Abdennur, Nezar Alexander
Mirny, Leonid A
Fudenberg, Geoffrey
Source :
PNAS
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Mammalian chromatin is spatially organized at many scales showing two prominent features in interphase: (i) alternating regions (1–10 Mb) of active and inactive chromatin that spatially segregate into different compartments, and (II) domains (<1 Mb), that is, regions that preferentially interact internally [topologically associating domains (TADs)] and are central to gene regulation. There is growing evidence that TADs are formed by active extrusion of chromatin loops by cohesin, whereas compartmentalization is established according to local chromatin states. Here, we use polymer simulations to examine how loop extrusion and compartmental segregation work collectively and potentially interfere in shaping global chromosome organization. A model with differential attraction between euchromatin and heterochromatin leads to phase separation and reproduces compartmentalization as observed in Hi-C. Loop extrusion, essential for TAD formation, in turn, interferes with compartmentalization. Our integrated model faithfully reproduces Hi-C data from puzzling experimental observations where altering loop extrusion also led to changes in compartmentalization. Specifically, depletion of chromatin-associated cohesin reduced TADs and revealed finer compartments, while increased processivity of cohesin strengthened large TADs and reduced compartmentalization; and depletion of the TAD boundary protein CTCF weakened TADs while leaving compartments unaffected. We reveal that these experimental perturbations are special cases of a general polymer phenomenon of active mixing by loop extrusion. Our results suggest that chromatin organization on the megabase scale emerges from competition of nonequilibrium active loop extrusion and epigenetically defined compartment structure. Keywords: chromatin; genome architecture; Hi-C; polymer physics; active matter<br />National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant 1504942)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PNAS
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1351762081
Document Type :
Electronic Resource