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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 May 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38766104

RESUMEN

Regulation of gene expression hinges on the interplay between enhancers and promoters, traditionally explored through pairwise analyses. Recent advancements in mapping genome folding, like GAM, SPRITE, and multi-contact Hi-C, have uncovered multi-way interactions among super-enhancers (SEs), spanning megabases, yet have not measured their frequency in single cells or the relationship between clustering and transcription. To close this gap, here we used multiplexed imaging to map the 3D positions of 376 SEs across thousands of mammalian nuclei. Notably, our single-cell images reveal that while SE-SE contacts are rare, SEs often form looser associations we termed "communities". These communities, averaging 4-5 SEs, assemble cooperatively under the combined effects of genomic tethers, Pol2 clustering, and nuclear compartmentalization. Larger communities are associated with more frequent and larger transcriptional bursts. Our work provides insights about the SE interactome in single cells that challenge existing hypotheses on SE clustering in the context of transcriptional regulation.

2.
Nat Genet ; 56(2): 306-314, 2024 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38238628

RESUMEN

Although promoters and their enhancers are frequently contained within a topologically associating domain (TAD), some developmentally important genes have their promoter and enhancers within different TADs. Hypotheses about molecular mechanisms enabling cross-TAD interactions remain to be assessed. To test these hypotheses, we used optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture to characterize the conformations of the Pitx1 locus on single chromosomes in developing mouse limbs. Our data support a model in which neighboring boundaries are stacked as a result of loop extrusion, bringing boundary-proximal cis-elements into contact. This stacking interaction also contributes to the appearance of architectural stripes in the population average maps. Through molecular dynamics simulations, we found that increasing boundary strengths facilitates the formation of the stacked boundary conformation, counter-intuitively facilitating border bypass. This work provides a revised view of the TAD borders' function, both facilitating and preventing cis-regulatory interactions, and introduces a framework to distinguish border-crossing from border-respecting enhancer-promoter pairs.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Animales , Ratones , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos/genética , Cromatina/genética , Cromosomas , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas/genética , Elementos Aisladores
3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37873344

RESUMEN

Repressive chromatin modifications are thought to compact chromatin to silence transcription. However, it is unclear how chromatin structure changes during silencing and epigenetic memory formation. We measured gene expression and chromatin structure in single cells after recruitment and release of repressors at a reporter gene. Chromatin structure is heterogeneous, with open and compact conformations present in both active and silent states. Recruitment of repressors associated with epigenetic memory produces chromatin compaction across 10-20 kilobases, while reversible silencing does not cause compaction at this scale. Chromatin compaction is inherited, but changes molecularly over time from histone methylation (H3K9me3) to DNA methylation. The level of compaction at the end of silencing quantitatively predicts epigenetic memory weeks later. Similarly, chromatin compaction at the Nanog locus predicts the degree of stem-cell fate commitment. These findings suggest that the chromatin state across tens of kilobases, beyond the gene itself, is important for epigenetic memory formation.

4.
Biophys J ; 122(17): 3532-3540, 2023 09 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37542372

RESUMEN

Chromosomal dynamics plays a central role in a number of critical biological processes, such as transcriptional regulation, genetic recombination, and DNA replication. However, visualization of chromatin is generally limited to live imaging of a few fluorescently labeled chromosomal loci or high-resolution reconstruction of multiple loci from a single time frame. To aid in mapping the underlying chromosomal structure based on parsimonious experimental measurements, we present an exact analytical expression for the evolution of the polymer configuration based on a flexible-polymer model, and we propose an algorithm that tracks the polymer configuration from live images of chromatin marked with several fluorescent marks. Our theory identifies the resolution of microscopy needed to achieve high-accuracy tracking for a given spacing of markers, establishing the statistical confidence in the assignment of genome identity to the visualized marks. We then leverage experimental data of locus-tracking measurements to demonstrate the validity of our modeling approach and to establish a basis for the design of experiments with a desired resolution. Altogether, this work provides a computational approach founded on polymer physics that vastly improves the interpretation of in vivo measurements of biopolymer dynamics.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina , Polímeros , Cromosomas , Replicación del ADN , Algoritmos
5.
Mol Cell ; 83(9): 1377-1392.e6, 2023 05 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37146570

RESUMEN

Although population-level analyses revealed significant roles for CTCF and cohesin in mammalian genome organization, their contributions at the single-cell level remain incompletely understood. Here, we used a super-resolution microscopy approach to measure the effects of removal of CTCF or cohesin in mouse embryonic stem cells. Single-chromosome traces revealed cohesin-dependent loops, frequently stacked at their loop anchors forming multi-way contacts (hubs), bridging across TAD boundaries. Despite these bridging interactions, chromatin in intervening TADs was not intermixed, remaining separated in distinct loops around the hub. At the multi-TAD scale, steric effects from loop stacking insulated local chromatin from ultra-long range (>4 Mb) contacts. Upon cohesin removal, the chromosomes were more disordered and increased cell-cell variability in gene expression. Our data revise the TAD-centric understanding of CTCF and cohesin and provide a multi-scale, structural picture of how they organize the genome on the single-cell level through distinct contributions to loop stacking.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina , Cromosomas , Animales , Ratones , Factor de Unión a CCCTC/genética , Factor de Unión a CCCTC/metabolismo , Cromosomas/genética , Cromosomas/metabolismo , Cromatina/genética , Cromatina/metabolismo , Células Madre Embrionarias de Ratones/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/metabolismo , Mamíferos/metabolismo
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(22): e2201883119, 2022 05 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35617427

RESUMEN

Polycomb-group proteins play critical roles in gene silencing through the deposition of histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) and chromatin compaction. This process is essential for embryonic stem cell (ESC) pluripotency, differentiation, and development. Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) can both read and write H3K27me3, enabling progressive spreading of H3K27me3 on the linear genome. Long-range Polycomb-associated DNA contacts have also been described, but their regulation and role in gene silencing remain unclear. Here, we apply H3K27me3 HiChIP, a protein-directed chromosome conformation method, and optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture to profile long-range Polycomb-associated DNA loops that span tens to hundreds of megabases across multiple topological associated domains in mouse ESCs and human induced pluripotent stem cells. We find that H3K27me3 loop anchors are enriched for Polycomb nucleation points and coincide with key developmental genes. Genetic deletion of H3K27me3 loop anchors results in disruption of spatial contact between distant loci and altered H3K27me3 in cis, both locally and megabases away on the same chromosome. In mouse embryos, loop anchor deletion leads to ectopic activation of the partner gene, suggesting that Polycomb-associated loops control gene silencing during development. Further, we find that alterations in PRC2 occupancy resulting from an RNA binding­deficient EZH2 mutant are accompanied by loss of Polycomb-associated DNA looping. Together, these results suggest PRC2 uses RNA binding to enhance long-range chromosome folding and H3K27me3 spreading. Developmental gene loci have unique roles in Polycomb spreading, emerging as important architectural elements of the epigenome.


Asunto(s)
Cromosomas , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica , Silenciador del Gen , Histonas , Complejo Represivo Polycomb 2 , Animales , Inmunoprecipitación de Cromatina/métodos , Cromosomas/química , Cromosomas/metabolismo , Embrión de Mamíferos , Proteína Potenciadora del Homólogo Zeste 2/genética , Histonas/genética , Histonas/metabolismo , Humanos , Células Madre Pluripotentes Inducidas/metabolismo , Lisina/metabolismo , Metilación , Ratones , Conformación de Ácido Nucleico , Complejo Represivo Polycomb 2/química , Complejo Represivo Polycomb 2/metabolismo
7.
Elife ; 102021 07 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34240703

RESUMEN

Animal genomes are organized into topologically associated domains (TADs). TADs are thought to contribute to gene regulation by facilitating enhancer-promoter (E-P) contacts within a TAD and preventing these contacts across TAD borders. However, the absolute difference in contact frequency across TAD boundaries is usually less than 2-fold, even though disruptions of TAD borders can change gene expression by 10-fold. Existing models fail to explain this hypersensitive response. Here, we propose a futile cycle model of enhancer-mediated regulation that can exhibit hypersensitivity through bistability and hysteresis. Consistent with recent experiments, this regulation does not exhibit strong correlation between E-P contact and promoter activity, even though regulation occurs through contact. Through mathematical analysis and stochastic simulation, we show that this system can create an illusion of E-P biochemical specificity and explain the importance of weak TAD boundaries. It also offers a mechanism to reconcile apparently contradictory results from recent global TAD disruption with local TAD boundary deletion experiments. Together, these analyses advance our understanding of cis-regulatory contacts in controlling gene expression and suggest new experimental directions.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina/química , Biología Computacional/métodos , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Transcripción Genética , Animales , Genoma , Humanos , Hipersensibilidad , Ratones , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas
8.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3423, 2021 06 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34103507

RESUMEN

Chromatin architecture plays an important role in gene regulation. Recent advances in super-resolution microscopy have made it possible to measure chromatin 3D structure and transcription in thousands of single cells. However, leveraging these complex data sets with a computationally unbiased method has been challenging. Here, we present a deep learning-based approach to better understand to what degree chromatin structure relates to transcriptional state of individual cells. Furthermore, we explore methods to "unpack the black box" to determine in an unbiased manner which structural features of chromatin regulation are most important for gene expression state. We apply this approach to an Optical Reconstruction of Chromatin Architecture dataset of the Bithorax gene cluster in Drosophila and show it outperforms previous contact-focused methods in predicting expression state from 3D structure. We find the structural information is distributed across the domain, overlapping and extending beyond domains identified by prior genetic analyses. Individual enhancer-promoter interactions are a minor contributor to predictions of activity.


Asunto(s)
ADN/genética , Aprendizaje Profundo , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas , Transcripción Genética , Algoritmos , Animales , Cromatina/genética , Simulación por Computador , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Silenciador del Gen , Genoma de los Insectos , Familia de Multigenes , Redes Neurales de la Computación
9.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 28(6): 501-511, 2021 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34117481

RESUMEN

The mammalian SWI/SNF complex, or BAF complex, has a conserved and direct role in antagonizing Polycomb-mediated repression. Yet, BAF also promotes repression by Polycomb in stem cells and cancer. How BAF both antagonizes and promotes Polycomb-mediated repression remains unknown. Here, we utilize targeted protein degradation to dissect the BAF-Polycomb axis in mouse embryonic stem cells on short timescales. We report that rapid BAF depletion redistributes Polycomb repressive complexes PRC1 and PRC2 from highly occupied domains, like Hox clusters, to weakly occupied sites normally opposed by BAF. Polycomb redistribution from highly repressed domains results in their decompaction, gain of active epigenomic features and transcriptional derepression. Surprisingly, through dose-dependent degradation of PRC1 and PRC2, we identify a conventional role for BAF in Polycomb-mediated repression, in addition to global Polycomb redistribution. These findings provide new mechanistic insight into the highly dynamic state of the Polycomb-Trithorax axis.


Asunto(s)
Ensamble y Desensamble de Cromatina/fisiología , Represión Epigenética/fisiología , Regulación de la Expresión Génica/fisiología , Complejos Multiproteicos/fisiología , Proteínas del Grupo Polycomb/fisiología , Animales , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Células Cultivadas , Ensamble y Desensamble de Cromatina/genética , ADN Helicasas/genética , ADN Helicasas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Unión al ADN/fisiología , Células Madre Embrionarias/metabolismo , Epigénesis Genética , Represión Epigenética/genética , Edición Génica , Regulación de la Expresión Génica/genética , Genes Homeobox , Genoma , Células HEK293 , Proteínas de Homeodominio/genética , Proteínas de Homeodominio/metabolismo , Humanos , Mutación con Pérdida de Función , Ratones , Proteínas Nucleares/genética , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Proteolisis , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusión/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción/genética , Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción/fisiología
10.
Nat Protoc ; 16(3): 1647-1713, 2021 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33619390

RESUMEN

Chromatin conformation capture (3C) methods and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) microscopy have been used to investigate the spatial organization of the genome. Although powerful, both techniques have limitations. Hi-C is challenging for low cell numbers and requires very deep sequencing to achieve its high resolution. In contrast, FISH can be done on small cell numbers and capture rare cell populations, but typically targets pairs of loci at a lower resolution. Here we detail a protocol for optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture (ORCA), a microscopy approach to trace the 3D DNA path within the nuclei of fixed tissues and cultured cells with a genomic resolution as fine as 2 kb and a throughput of ~10,000 cells per experiment. ORCA can identify structural features with comparable resolution to Hi-C while providing single-cell resolution and multimodal measurements characteristic of microscopy. We describe how to use this DNA labeling in parallel with multiplexed labeling of dozens of RNAs to relate chromatin structure and gene expression in the same cells. Oligopaint probe design, primary probe making, sample collection, cryosectioning and RNA/DNA primary probe hybridization can be completed in 1.5 weeks, while automated RNA/DNA barcode hybridization and RNA/DNA imaging typically takes 2-6 d for data collection and 2-7 d for the automated steps of image analysis.


Asunto(s)
Hibridación Fluorescente in Situ/métodos , Microscopía Fluorescente/métodos , Mapeo de Restricción Óptica/métodos , Línea Celular , Núcleo Celular/genética , Células Cultivadas , Cromatina/metabolismo , Inmunoprecipitación de Cromatina/métodos , Cromosomas/genética , ADN/química , ADN/genética , Sondas de ADN , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Técnicas Genéticas , Genoma/genética , Genómica/métodos , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , ARN/química , ARN/genética
11.
Cell ; 178(2): 473-490.e26, 2019 07 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31230715

RESUMEN

We introduce APEX-seq, a method for RNA sequencing based on direct proximity labeling of RNA using the peroxidase enzyme APEX2. APEX-seq in nine distinct subcellular locales produced a nanometer-resolution spatial map of the human transcriptome as a resource, revealing extensive patterns of localization for diverse RNA classes and transcript isoforms. We uncover a radial organization of the nuclear transcriptome, which is gated at the inner surface of the nuclear pore for cytoplasmic export of processed transcripts. We identify two distinct pathways of messenger RNA localization to mitochondria, each associated with specific sets of transcripts for building complementary macromolecular machines within the organelle. APEX-seq should be widely applicable to many systems, enabling comprehensive investigations of the spatial transcriptome.


Asunto(s)
ADN-(Sitio Apurínico o Apirimidínico) Liasa/metabolismo , Endonucleasas/metabolismo , Enzimas Multifuncionales/metabolismo , ARN/metabolismo , Análisis de Secuencia de ARN/métodos , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Microscopía Fluorescente , Mitocondrias/genética , ARN/química , ARN Mensajero/química , ARN Mensajero/metabolismo , Transcriptoma
12.
Nature ; 568(7750): 49-54, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30886393

RESUMEN

The establishment of cell types during development requires precise interactions between genes and distal regulatory sequences. We have a limited understanding of how these interactions look in three dimensions, vary across cell types in complex tissue, and relate to transcription. Here we describe optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture (ORCA), a method that can trace the DNA path in single cells with nanoscale accuracy and genomic resolution reaching two kilobases. We used ORCA to study a Hox gene cluster in cryosectioned Drosophila embryos and labelled around 30 RNA species in parallel. We identified cell-type-specific physical borders between active and Polycomb-repressed DNA, and unexpected Polycomb-independent borders. Deletion of Polycomb-independent borders led to ectopic enhancer-promoter contacts, aberrant gene expression, and developmental defects. Together, these results illustrate an approach for high-resolution, single-cell DNA domain analysis in vivo, identify domain structures that change with cell identity, and show that border elements contribute to the formation of physical domains in Drosophila.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina/química , ADN/análisis , Drosophila melanogaster/embriología , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Conformación de Ácido Nucleico , ARN/análisis , Análisis de la Célula Individual , Animales , Cromatina/genética , Cromatina/metabolismo , ADN/genética , ADN/metabolismo , Drosophila melanogaster/citología , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos/genética , Femenino , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica , Genes Homeobox/genética , Genoma de los Insectos/genética , Masculino , Familia de Multigenes/genética , Especificidad de Órganos , Proteínas del Grupo Polycomb/genética , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas/genética , ARN/genética , ARN/metabolismo , Transcripción Genética
13.
Science ; 362(6413)2018 10 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30361340

RESUMEN

The spatial organization of chromatin is pivotal for regulating genome functions. We report an imaging method for tracing chromatin organization with kilobase- and nanometer-scale resolution, unveiling chromatin conformation across topologically associating domains (TADs) in thousands of individual cells. Our imaging data revealed TAD-like structures with globular conformation and sharp domain boundaries in single cells. The boundaries varied from cell to cell, occurring with nonzero probabilities at all genomic positions but preferentially at CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)- and cohesin-binding sites. Notably, cohesin depletion, which abolished TADs at the population-average level, did not diminish TAD-like structures in single cells but eliminated preferential domain boundary positions. Moreover, we observed widespread, cooperative, multiway chromatin interactions, which remained after cohesin depletion. These results provide critical insight into the mechanisms underlying chromatin domain and hub formation.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina/química , Análisis de la Célula Individual/métodos , Factor de Unión a CCCTC/química , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/química , Cromatina/ultraestructura , Proteínas Cromosómicas no Histona/química , Genoma Humano , Células HCT116 , Humanos , Hibridación Fluorescente in Situ , Unión Proteica , Dominios Proteicos , Cohesinas
14.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1663: 231-252, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28924672

RESUMEN

OligoSTORM and OligoDNA-PAINT meld the Oligopaint technology for fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with, respectively, Stochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy (STORM) and DNA-based Point Accumulation for Imaging in Nanoscale Topography (DNA-PAINT) to enable in situ single-molecule super-resolution imaging of nucleic acids. Both strategies enable ≤20 nm resolution and are appropriate for imaging nanoscale features of the genomes of a wide range of species, including human, mouse, and fruit fly (Drosophila).


Asunto(s)
ADN/química , Hibridación Fluorescente in Situ/métodos , Imagen Individual de Molécula/métodos , Animales , Drosophila , Genoma , Humanos , Ratones
15.
Elife ; 52016 05 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27198188

RESUMEN

Spatial organization of the transcriptome has emerged as a powerful means for regulating the post-transcriptional fate of RNA in eukaryotes; however, whether prokaryotes use RNA spatial organization as a mechanism for post-transcriptional regulation remains unclear. Here we used super-resolution microscopy to image the E. coli transcriptome and observed a genome-wide spatial organization of RNA: mRNAs encoding inner-membrane proteins are enriched at the membrane, whereas mRNAs encoding outer-membrane, cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins are distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Membrane enrichment is caused by co-translational insertion of signal peptides recognized by the signal-recognition particle. Time-resolved RNA-sequencing revealed that degradation rates of inner-membrane-protein mRNAs are on average greater that those of the other mRNAs and that this selective destabilization of inner-membrane-protein mRNAs is abolished by dissociating the RNA degradosome from the membrane. Together, these results demonstrate that the bacterial transcriptome is spatially organized and suggest that this organization shapes the post-transcriptional dynamics of mRNAs.


Asunto(s)
Escherichia coli/citología , Escherichia coli/genética , Procesamiento Postranscripcional del ARN , Transcriptoma , Microscopía Fluorescente , Análisis de Secuencia de ARN , Análisis Espacial
16.
Nature ; 529(7586): 418-22, 2016 Jan 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26760202

RESUMEN

Metazoan genomes are spatially organized at multiple scales, from packaging of DNA around individual nucleosomes to segregation of whole chromosomes into distinct territories. At the intermediate scale of kilobases to megabases, which encompasses the sizes of genes, gene clusters and regulatory domains, the three-dimensional (3D) organization of DNA is implicated in multiple gene regulatory mechanisms, but understanding this organization remains a challenge. At this scale, the genome is partitioned into domains of different epigenetic states that are essential for regulating gene expression. Here we investigate the 3D organization of chromatin in different epigenetic states using super-resolution imaging. We classified genomic domains in Drosophila cells into transcriptionally active, inactive or Polycomb-repressed states, and observed distinct chromatin organizations for each state. All three types of chromatin domains exhibit power-law scaling between their physical sizes in 3D and their domain lengths, but each type has a distinct scaling exponent. Polycomb-repressed domains show the densest packing and most intriguing chromatin folding behaviour, in which chromatin packing density increases with domain length. Distinct from the self-similar organization displayed by transcriptionally active and inactive chromatin, the Polycomb-repressed domains are characterized by a high degree of chromatin intermixing within the domain. Moreover, compared to inactive domains, Polycomb-repressed domains spatially exclude neighbouring active chromatin to a much stronger degree. Computational modelling and knockdown experiments suggest that reversible chromatin interactions mediated by Polycomb-group proteins play an important role in these unique packaging properties of the repressed chromatin. Taken together, our super-resolution images reveal distinct chromatin packaging for different epigenetic states at the kilobase-to-megabase scale, a length scale that is directly relevant to genome regulation.


Asunto(s)
Ensamble y Desensamble de Cromatina , Cromatina/genética , Cromatina/metabolismo , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Epigénesis Genética , Animales , Línea Celular , Posicionamiento de Cromosoma , Drosophila melanogaster/citología , Represión Epigenética , Fractales , Genoma/genética , Proteínas del Grupo Polycomb/metabolismo , Transcripción Genética
17.
Nat Commun ; 7: 10291, 2016 Jan 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26759081

RESUMEN

The genomes of metazoa are organized at multiple scales. Many proteins that regulate genome architecture, including Polycomb group (PcG) proteins, form subnuclear structures. Deciphering mechanistic links between protein organization and chromatin architecture requires precise description and mechanistic perturbations of both. Using super-resolution microscopy, here we show that PcG proteins are organized into hundreds of nanoscale protein clusters. We manipulated PcG clusters by disrupting the polymerization activity of the sterile alpha motif (SAM) of the PcG protein Polyhomeotic (Ph) or by increasing Ph levels. Ph with mutant SAM disrupts clustering of endogenous PcG complexes and chromatin interactions while elevating Ph level increases cluster number and chromatin interactions. These effects can be captured by molecular simulations based on a previously described chromatin polymer model. Both perturbations also alter gene expression. Organization of PcG proteins into small, abundant clusters on chromatin through Ph SAM polymerization activity may shape genome architecture through chromatin interactions.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina/metabolismo , Proteínas de Unión al ADN/metabolismo , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Espacio Intranuclear/metabolismo , Complejo Represivo Polycomb 1/metabolismo , Secuencias de Aminoácidos , Animales , Línea Celular , Inmunoprecipitación de Cromatina , Drosophila , Técnica del Anticuerpo Fluorescente , Microscopía , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Imagen Óptica , Proteínas del Grupo Polycomb/metabolismo , Polímeros , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa de Transcriptasa Inversa , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Análisis de Secuencia de ARN
18.
Nat Commun ; 6: 7147, 2015 May 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25962338

RESUMEN

Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a powerful single-cell technique for studying nuclear structure and organization. Here we report two advances in FISH-based imaging. We first describe the in situ visualization of single-copy regions of the genome using two single-molecule super-resolution methodologies. We then introduce a robust and reliable system that harnesses single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to visually distinguish the maternal and paternal homologous chromosomes in mammalian and insect systems. Both of these new technologies are enabled by renewable, bioinformatically designed, oligonucleotide-based Oligopaint probes, which we augment with a strategy that uses secondary oligonucleotides (oligos) to produce and enhance fluorescent signals. These advances should substantially expand the capability to query parent-of-origin-specific chromosome positioning and gene expression on a cell-by-cell basis.


Asunto(s)
Pintura Cromosómica/métodos , Cromosomas/genética , Haplotipos , Hibridación Fluorescente in Situ/métodos , Análisis de Secuencia por Matrices de Oligonucleótidos/métodos , Animales , Línea Celular , Drosophila , Biblioteca de Genes , Sondas de Oligonucleótidos/metabolismo , Coloración y Etiquetado
19.
Science ; 348(6233): aaa6090, 2015 Apr 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25858977

RESUMEN

Knowledge of the expression profile and spatial landscape of the transcriptome in individual cells is essential for understanding the rich repertoire of cellular behaviors. Here, we report multiplexed error-robust fluorescence in situ hybridization (MERFISH), a single-molecule imaging approach that allows the copy numbers and spatial localizations of thousands of RNA species to be determined in single cells. Using error-robust encoding schemes to combat single-molecule labeling and detection errors, we demonstrated the imaging of 100 to 1000 distinct RNA species in hundreds of individual cells. Correlation analysis of the ~10(4) to 10(6) pairs of genes allowed us to constrain gene regulatory networks, predict novel functions for many unannotated genes, and identify distinct spatial distribution patterns of RNAs that correlate with properties of the encoded proteins.


Asunto(s)
Perfilación de la Expresión Génica/métodos , Hibridación Fluorescente in Situ/métodos , Imagen Molecular/métodos , ARN Mensajero/análisis , Análisis de la Célula Individual/métodos , Transcriptoma , Fibroblastos , Ensayos Analíticos de Alto Rendimiento , Humanos , Sondas ARN
20.
Ecology ; 92(8): 1648-57, 2011 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21905431

RESUMEN

Understanding the environmental factors influencing animal movements is fundamental to theoretical and applied research in the field of movement ecology. Studies relating fine-scale movement paths to spatiotemporally structured landscape data, such as vegetation productivity or human activity, are particularly lacking despite the obvious importance of such information to understanding drivers of animal movement. In part, this may be because few approaches provide the sophistication to characterize the complexity of movement behavior and relate it to diverse, varying environmental stimuli. We overcame this hurdle by applying, for the first time to an ecological question, a finite impulse-response signal-filtering approach to identify human and natural environmental drivers of movements of 13 free-ranging African elephants (Loxodonta africana) from distinct social groups collected over seven years. A minimum mean-square error (MMSE) estimation criterion allowed comparison of the predictive power of landscape and ecological model inputs. We showed that a filter combining vegetation dynamics, human and physical landscape features, and previous movement outperformed simpler filter structures, indicating the importance of both dynamic and static landscape features, as well as habit, on movement decisions taken by elephants. Elephant responses to vegetation productivity indices were not uniform in time or space, indicating that elephant foraging strategies are more complex than simply gravitation toward areas of high productivity. Predictions were most frequently inaccurate outside protected area boundaries near human settlements, suggesting that human activity disrupts typical elephant movement behavior. Successful management strategies at the human-elephant interface, therefore, are likely to be context specific and dynamic. Signal processing provides a promising approach for elucidating environmental factors that drive animal movements over large time and spatial scales.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Ecosistema , Elefantes/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Movimiento , Animales , Dinámica Poblacional
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