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SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

How polymer-loop-extruding motors shape chromosomes

Ed Banigan
MIT
Sep 13, 2021

Chromosomes are extremely long, active polymers that are spatially organized across multiple scales to promote cellular functions, such as gene transcription and genetic inheritance. During each cell cycle, chromosomes are dramatically compacted as cells divide and dynamically reorganized into less compact, spatiotemporally patterned structures after cell division. These activities are facilitated by DNA/chromatin-binding protein motors called SMC complexes. Each of these motors can perform a unique activity known as “loop extrusion,” in which the motor binds the DNA/chromatin polymer, reels in the polymer fiber, and extrudes it as a loop. Using simulations and theory, I show how loop-extruding motors can collectively compact and spatially organize chromosomes in different scenarios. First, I show that loop-extruding complexes can generate sufficient compaction for cell division, provided that loop-extrusion satisfies stringent physical requirements. Second, while loop-extrusion alone does not uniquely spatially pattern the genome, interactions between SMC complexes and protein “boundary elements” can generate patterns that emerge in the genome after cell division. Intriguingly, these “boundary elements” are not necessarily stationary, which can generate a variety of patterns in the neighborhood of transcriptionally active genes. These predictions, along with supporting experiments, show how SMC complexes and other molecular machinery, such as RNA polymerase, can spatially organize the genome. More generally, this work demonstrates both the versatility of the loop extrusion mechanism for chromosome functional organization and how seemingly subtle microscopic effects can emerge in the spatiotemporal structure of nonequilibrium polymers.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Transcription factor dynamics and nuclear organization during early embryonic development

Mustafa Mir
University of Pennsylvania
Apr 23, 2021
SeminarPhysics of Life

Chromosomes, condensates and transcriptional control

Stephanie Weber, Olga Dudko, Gašper Tkačik
CUNY/ITS, CUNY/Princeton Center for Physics of Biological Function
Nov 6, 2020
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Transcription regulates histone homeostasis

Kora-Lee Claude (Schmoller Lab)
Institute of Functional Epigenetics, Helmholtz, Germany
Sep 7, 2020
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Cooperative binding of transcription factors is a hallmark of active enhancers

Srinivas Ramachandran
University of Colorado
Aug 12, 2020
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Chromatin transcription: cryo-EM structures of Pol II-nucleosome and nucleosome-CHD complexes

Lucas Farnung
Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry
Jul 29, 2020
SeminarPhysics of Life

Measuring transcription at a single gene copy reveals hidden drivers of bacterial individuality

Ido Golding
UIUC - Urbana-Champaign IL – USA
Jul 29, 2020

Single-cell measurements of mRNA copy numbers inform our understanding of stochastic gene expression, but these measurements coarse-grain over the individual copies of the gene, where transcription and its regulation take place stochastically. We recently combined single-molecule quantification of mRNA and gene loci to measure the transcriptional activity of an endogenous gene in individual Escherichia coli bacteria. When interpreted using a theoretical model for mRNA dynamics, the single-cell data allowed us to obtain the probabilistic rates of promoter switching, transcription initiation and elongation, mRNA release and degradation. Unexpectedly, we found that gene activity can be strongly coupled to the transcriptional state of another copy of the same gene present in the cell, and to the event of gene replication during the bacterial cell cycle. These gene-copy and cell-cycle correlations demonstrate the limits of mapping whole-cell mRNA numbers to the underlying stochastic gene activity and highlight the contribution of previously hidden variables to the observed population heterogeneity.

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