| Literature DB >> 29357905 |
Nicholas Allen Kinney1, Igor V Sharakhov2,3,4, Alexey V Onufriev5,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well recognized that the interphase chromatin of higher eukaryotes folds into non-random configurations forming territories within the nucleus. Chromosome territories have biologically significant properties, and understanding how these properties change with time during lifetime of the cell is important. Chromosome-nuclear envelope (Chr-NE) interactions play a role in epigenetic regulation of DNA replication, repair, and transcription. However, their role in maintaining chromosome territories remains unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Chromatin; Chromosome territories; Drosophila melanogaster; Nuclear envelope
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29357905 PMCID: PMC5776839 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-018-0173-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1“Beads-on-string” model of D. melanogaster interphase chromosomes used here. On the left, the beads are colored by the three major chromosomes in wild-type D. melanogaster. On the right, the coloring is by Chr–NE attachments mapped from experiment, shown in blue
Fig. 2Average displacement of a chromosome locus from simulation and experiment [31]. By matching just one model parameter to experiment, simulation reproduces the complexity of experimental diffusive motion of non-polytene interphase chromosomes in the nucleus. Trivial unconfined diffusive motion would correspond to a straight line ∆r2 = 6Dt. Error bars on simulation show the range of motion from n = 8 independent trajectories. Experimental error bars are from Ref. [31]
Fig. 3Effect of Chr–NE attachments on chromosome territories. Error bars represent 1 standard deviation calculated from n = 8 simulation trajectories. Red line—mean with attachments; blue line—mean without attachments. Biologically speaking, the territory index (y-axis) represents the fraction of chromatin inside its native convex hull (see “Methods” section)
Fig. 9Territory index of a chromosome is defined as the percent of its beads found inside the chromosome’s own convex hull. Example: light blue chromosome inside its convex hull
Fig. 4Effect of Chr–NE attachments on chromosome entanglement. Red line—mean with attachments; blue line—mean without attachments. Error bars represent 1 standard deviation calculated from n = 8 simulation trajectories
Fig. 5Effect of Chr–NE attachments on the degree of chromosome polarization (Rabl configuration). Error bars represent 1 standard deviation calculated from n = 8 simulation trajectories. Red line—mean with attachments; blue line—mean without attachments. The black dashed line is a guide to emphasize the breaking down of the Rabl configuration
Fig. 6Probability of contact, P, between loci belonging to the same chromosome depends on their separation, s, along the polymer backbone. In general, this relation is captured by the parameter in the expression,
Fig. 7Scaling of chromosome contacts in the presence and absence of attachments to nuclear envelope. Error bars represent 1 standard deviation calculated from n = 8 simulation trajectories. Red line—mean with Chr–NE attachments; blue line—mean without Chr–NE attachments
Essential model parameters
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| X chromosome | 22,422,827 bp = 321 beads |
| 2L arm | 23,011,544 bp = 329 beads |
| 2R arm | 21,146,708 bp = 302 beads |
| 3L arm | 24,543,557 bp = 351 beads |
| 3R arm | 27,905,053 bp = 399 beads |
| Nucleus radius ( | 2.25 µm |
| Bead radius ( | .1 µm |
| Bead mass | 77 M daltons |
| % confinement |
Simulation parameters
| Equations | Parameter | Value |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
|
| .2 microns (twice the bead radius) | |
|
| ||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
| 77MDa (bead mass) |
|
|
|
aTo model the excluded volume of the nucleolus we use microns which is a sum of the bead radius and nucleolus radius
Fig. 8Model of Chr–NE interactions. Specific beads are attached to the NE using a Lennard-Jones cosine interaction, Eq. 3. Beads lacking affinity for the NE use a shifted Lennard-Jones potential, Eq. 4
Fig. 10Spatial separation of chromosomes with respect to putative translations (inset) is used to quantify chromosome entanglement. The minimum number of crossings enumerated in 20 directions is used as a quantitative measure of chromosome entanglement