| Literature DB >> 31084607 |
Antony Lesage1, Vincent Dahirel2, Jean-Marc Victor1, Maria Barbi3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Localized functional domains within chromosomes, known as topologically associating domains (TADs), have been recently highlighted. In Drosophila, TADs are biochemically defined by epigenetic marks, this suggesting that the 3D arrangement may be the "missing link" between epigenetics and gene activity. Recent observations (Boettiger et al. in Nature 529(7586):418-422, 2016) provide access to structural features of these domains with unprecedented resolution thanks to super-resolution experiments. In particular, they give access to the distribution of the radii of gyration for domains of different linear length and associated with different transcriptional activity states: active, inactive or repressed. Intriguingly, the observed scaling laws lack consistent interpretation in polymer physics.Entities:
Keywords: Coil–globule; Drosophila; Epigenetic domains; Phase transition; Polymer
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31084607 PMCID: PMC6515630 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-019-0269-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Theoretical curves for a finite-size polymer model. Log–log plot of mean radii of gyration (2) (in Kuhn length units) against the number of monomers N at different values of below and above . Typical configurations at and (red), and , 538 and 5012 (from left to right, blue) are shown. The green dots are a rough representation of the radius of gyration as a function of the domain length from the simulated sticky polymer domain of Ref. [2] (Fig. 4c), up to the close packing limit (dotted line)
Summary of conditions and Flory exponents expected for the three typical polymer folding states
| Coil (SAW) | Theta-polymer (RW) | Globule | |
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| Flory | 3/5 | 1/2 | 1/3 |
Summary of scaling exponents obtained from a power-law fit of data from Ref. [2] for active (A), inactive (I) and repressed (R) epigenetic domains, of either the mean or median values of the radii of gyration for all different colors and lengths
| State: | Active | Inactive | Repressed |
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Fig. 2Experimental data fit: distributions. The three data ensembles from Ref. [2] (histograms) with the corresponding theoretical fitting distributions (lines). Colors refer to epigenetics: red for active, black for inactive and blue for repressed domains. The theoretical distributions have been calculated from the analytical expression of the probability density by using the fitting parameters of Table 3. A more detailed view of the complete set of histograms and fits is given in Additional file 1: Figs. S6, S7 and S8
Summary of physical parameters obtained from the fit of Boettiger’s data [2] for active (A), inactive (I) and repressed (R) epigenetic domains through the Bayesian procedure (mean values, see Additional file 1: Figs. S3–S5)
| State | Active | Inactive | Repressed | |
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| Bayesian fit | Estimate | Bayesian fit | Bayesian fit | |
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| ~ 1100–1500 |
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| ~ 32–37 |
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| n/a | ||
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| n/a | |
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| ~ 35–40 |
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| ~ 1.9–2.2 |
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| ~ 6–8 |
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Errors are calculated from the standard deviations of marginalized parameter distributions. At the bottom, some derived geometrical parameters as the compaction in bp/nm, in nucleosomes per 10 nm, the number of nucleosomes per Kuhn segment C. Derived parameters are calculated by assuming a nucleosome repeat length of 182 bp for active domains, 192 bp for inactive and repressed domains [25]. (The numerical results obtained with 182 or 192 bp are very close, in the error range). For active domains, the right column estimates are obtained by including architectural features, see “Discussion”
Fig. 3a Experimental data fit: mean gyration radii. Mean as a function of the domain length L calculated from the analytical model with the parameter sets of Table 3: active (red line), inactive (black line), repressed (blue line). Boxplots (same colors) correspond to the experimental data from Ref. [2]. Dashed lines are obtained from previous fitting curves by deconvolution, hence correspond to the behavior expected in an haploid system. The orange dotted lines represents the typical scaling law. A corresponding fit for median values is given in Additional file 1: Fig. S9; b Experimental images. 3D-STORM images adapted from Boettiger et al. [2] corresponding to an active, inactive and repressed domain (from top to bottom; 106, 79 and 119 kb, respectively). c Fitting model snapshots. Typical configurations of the domains shown in (b) obtained with the corresponding fitted parameters , and ; d Corresponding monomers at the fiber scale. Two-angle models of the nucleosome fibers corresponding to the fitted parameters of the domains shown in (b) and simulated in (c). In the case of black domains, the green spheres suggest the presence of H1 histones
Fig. 4Comparison between the observed behavior and the calculations on a two-angle model of the nucleosome fiber. In the central plot, the Kuhn length is reported as a function of the compaction in nucleosomes per 10 nm. Active domains are represented by the observed power law (red thick line), while for inactive and repressed domains, we directly reported the measured values from Table 1 (black and blue dots, respectively). The colored dot-line plots correspond to the same physical quantities calculated on the basis of the two-angle model in a large range of wrapping angles, going from a completely wrapped nucleosome (angle ) to a largely open one (angle ). The angle dependence is explicitly accounted for in the four lateral plots. Two cases with NRL = 182 bp (blue-green) and NRL 152 bp (purple-orange) are reported here. The four displayed fibers are completely regular fibers obtained by using the two-angle model for the following parameter sets : , NRL 152 bp (yellow-orange fiber); , NRL 152 bp (purple fiber); , NRL = 182 bp (yellow-green fiber); , NRL 182 bp (blue-green fiber). For each fiber picture, the length corresponds precisely to one Kuhn length as calculated from the corresponding parameter set