| Literature DB >> 28406741 |
Soya Shinkai1, Tadasu Nozaki2, Kazuhiro Maeshima2, Yuichi Togashi1.
Abstract
The genome is 3-dimensionally organized in the cell, and the mammalian genome DNA is partitioned into submegabase-sized chromatin domains. Genome functions are regulated within and across the domains according to their organization, whereas the chromatin itself is highly dynamic. However, the details of such dynamic organization of chromatin domains in living cells remain unclear. To unify chromatin dynamics and organization, we recently demonstrated that structural information of chromatin domains in living human cells can be extracted from analyses of the subdiffusive nucleosome movement using mathematical modeling. Our mathematical analysis suggested that as the chromatin domain becomes smaller and more compact, nucleosome movement becomes increasingly restricted. Here, we show the implication of these results for bridging the gap between chromatin dynamics and organization, and provide physical insight into chromatin domains as efficient units to conduct genome functions in the thermal noisy environment of the cell.Entities:
Keywords: Chromatin dynamics; fractal chromatin domain; interphase chromatin; nucleosome fluctuation; polymer physics; single-nucleosome imaging; subdiffusion
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28406741 PMCID: PMC5597300 DOI: 10.1080/19491034.2017.1313937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleus ISSN: 1949-1034 Impact factor: 4.197
Figure 1.Normal diffusion (blue) of a particle driven by thermal noise characterized by the MSD, which is proportional to both the diffusion coefficient and time . Meanwhile, the diffusive movement of a monomer within a polymer globule represents the subdiffusion due to the structural restriction of the globule. A larger globule results in higher mobility of a monomer (orange, upper). As is shown in Eq. (2), as a polymer globule becomes smaller and more compact, the MSD also becomes smaller (green, lower).
Figure 2.Fractal dimensions for polymers to characterize the effective conformational states. For example, and 3 correspond to a straight line and the most compact state, respectively. The polymer with the excluded volume effect forms an extended state with . For , the ideal chain is a polymer corresponding to a random-walk conformation.
Figure 3.(A) A simple scheme for oblique illumination microscopy. An illumination laser (green) and focal plane (red) in a living cell are shown. (B) Single-nucleosome image of a human HeLa cell nucleus expressing H2B-PA-mCherry. Each dot represents a single nucleosome (adopted from ref. 24). (C) Representative trajectories of fluorescently labeled single nucleosomes (50 ms per time frame). (D) Plots of the MSD at the interior (orange) and periphery (green) regions. Each plot fits well with the MSD curve for subdiffusion (Eq. (1)).