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      Chromatin organization by an interplay of loop extrusion and compartmental segregation

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          Significance

          Human DNA is 2 m long and is folded into a 10-μm-sized cellular nucleus. Experiments have revealed two major features of genome organization: Segregation of alternating active and inactive regions into compartments, and formation of compacted local domains. These were hypothesized to be formed by different mechanisms: Compartments can be formed by microphase separation and domains by active, motor-driven, loop extrusion. Here, we integrate these mechanisms into a polymer model and show that their interplay coherently explains diverse experimental data for wild-type and mutant cells. Our results provide a framework for the interpretation of chromosome organization in cellular phenotypes and highlight that chromatin is a complex, active matter shaped by an interplay of phase segregation and loop extrusion.

          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.

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          Most cited references34

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          Organization of the mitotic chromosome.

          Mitotic chromosomes are among the most recognizable structures in the cell, yet for over a century their internal organization remains largely unsolved. We applied chromosome conformation capture methods, 5C and Hi-C, across the cell cycle and revealed two distinct three-dimensional folding states of the human genome. We show that the highly compartmentalized and cell type-specific organization described previously for nonsynchronous cells is restricted to interphase. In metaphase, we identified a homogenous folding state that is locus-independent, common to all chromosomes, and consistent among cell types, suggesting a general principle of metaphase chromosome organization. Using polymer simulations, we found that metaphase Hi-C data are inconsistent with classic hierarchical models and are instead best described by a linearly organized longitudinally compressed array of consecutive chromatin loops.
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            Active genes dynamically colocalize to shared sites of ongoing transcription.

            The intranuclear position of many genes has been correlated with their activity state, suggesting that migration to functional subcompartments may influence gene expression. Indeed, nascent RNA production and RNA polymerase II seem to be localized into discrete foci or 'transcription factories'. Current estimates from cultured cells indicate that multiple genes could occupy the same factory, although this has not yet been observed. Here we show that, during transcription in vivo, distal genes colocalize to the same transcription factory at high frequencies. Active genes are dynamically organized into shared nuclear subcompartments, and movement into or out of these factories results in activation or abatement of transcription. Thus, rather than recruiting and assembling transcription complexes, active genes migrate to preassembled transcription sites.
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              Cohesin's binding to chromosomes depends on a separate complex consisting of Scc2 and Scc4 proteins.

              Cohesion between sister chromatids depends on a multisubunit cohesin complex that binds to chromosomes around DNA replication and dissociates from them at the onset of anaphase. Scc2p, though not a cohesin subunit, is also required for sister chromatid cohesion. We show here that Scc2p forms a complex with a novel protein, Scc4p, which is also necessary for sister cohesion. In scc2 or scc4 mutants, cohesin complexes form normally but fail to bind both to centromeres and to chromosome arms. Our data suggest that a major role for the Scc2p/Scc4p complex is to facilitate the loading of cohesin complexes onto chromosomes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
                Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A
                pnas
                pnas
                PNAS
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
                National Academy of Sciences
                0027-8424
                1091-6490
                17 July 2018
                2 July 2018
                2 July 2018
                : 115
                : 29
                : E6697-E6706
                Affiliations
                [1] aDepartment of Physics, Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139;
                [2] bGladstone Institutes of Data Science and Biotechnology , San Francisco, CA 94158
                Author notes
                1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: leonid@ 123456mit.edu .

                Edited by Robert H. Singer, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, and approved June 4, 2018 (received for review October 10, 2017)

                Author contributions: J.N. and L.A.M. designed research; J.N., G.F., M.I., and N.A. performed research; and J.N., G.F., M.I., N.A., and L.A.M. wrote the paper.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5905-6517
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0785-5410
                Article
                201717730
                10.1073/pnas.1717730115
                6055145
                29967174
                082ce820-7884-41f6-8687-b0cde13ecbf7
                Copyright © 2018 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.

                This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).

                History
                Page count
                Pages: 10
                Funding
                Funded by: National Science Foundation (NSF) 100000001
                Award ID: 1504942
                Award Recipient : Johannes Nuebler Award Recipient : Geoffrey Fudenberg Award Recipient : Maxim Imakaev Award Recipient : Nezar Abdennur Award Recipient : Leonid A. Mirny
                Funded by: HHS | National Institutes of Health (NIH) 100000002
                Award ID: GM114190
                Award Recipient : Johannes Nuebler Award Recipient : Geoffrey Fudenberg Award Recipient : Maxim Imakaev Award Recipient : Nezar Abdennur Award Recipient : Leonid A. Mirny
                Funded by: HHS | National Institutes of Health (NIH) 100000002
                Award ID: DK107980
                Award Recipient : Johannes Nuebler Award Recipient : Geoffrey Fudenberg Award Recipient : Maxim Imakaev Award Recipient : Nezar Abdennur Award Recipient : Leonid A. Mirny
                Categories
                PNAS Plus
                Physical Sciences
                Biophysics and Computational Biology
                Biological Sciences
                Cell Biology
                PNAS Plus

                chromatin,genome architecture,hi-c,polymer physics,active matter

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