| Literature DB >> 36220894 |
Maria Victoria Neguembor1, Juan Pablo Arcon2, Diana Buitrago2,3, Rafael Lema2, Jürgen Walther2, Ximena Garate4, Laura Martin4, Pablo Romero2, Jumana AlHaj Abed5, Marta Gut6,7, Julie Blanc6, Melike Lakadamyali8, Chao-Ting Wu5, Isabelle Brun Heath2, Modesto Orozco9,10,11, Pablo D Dans12,13,14, Maria Pia Cosma15,16,17,18.
Abstract
The linear sequence of DNA provides invaluable information about genes and their regulatory elements along chromosomes. However, to fully understand gene function and regulation, we need to dissect how genes physically fold in the three-dimensional nuclear space. Here we describe immuno-OligoSTORM, an imaging strategy that reveals the distribution of nucleosomes within specific genes in super-resolution, through the simultaneous visualization of DNA and histones. We combine immuno-OligoSTORM with restraint-based and coarse-grained modeling approaches to integrate super-resolution imaging data with Hi-C contact frequencies and deconvoluted micrococcal nuclease-sequencing information. The resulting method, called Modeling immuno-OligoSTORM, allows quantitative modeling of genes with nucleosome resolution and provides information about chromatin accessibility for regulatory factors, such as RNA polymerase II. With Modeling immuno-OligoSTORM, we explore intercellular variability, transcriptional-dependent gene conformation, and folding of housekeeping and pluripotency-related genes in human pluripotent and differentiated cells, thereby obtaining the highest degree of data integration achieved so far to our knowledge.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36220894 DOI: 10.1038/s41594-022-00839-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Struct Mol Biol ISSN: 1545-9985 Impact factor: 18.361