{"id":1125187,"date":"2024-05-23T07:53:37","date_gmt":"2024-05-23T11:53:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/uncategorized\/active-transcription-and-epigenetic-reactions-synergistically-regulate-meso-scale-genomic-organization-nature-com\/"},"modified":"2024-05-23T07:53:37","modified_gmt":"2024-05-23T11:53:37","slug":"active-transcription-and-epigenetic-reactions-synergistically-regulate-meso-scale-genomic-organization-nature-com","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/genome\/active-transcription-and-epigenetic-reactions-synergistically-regulate-meso-scale-genomic-organization-nature-com\/","title":{"rendered":"Active transcription and epigenetic reactions synergistically regulate meso-scale genomic organization &#8211; Nature.com"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>Numerical simulations capture experimentally observed features    of chromatin organization    <\/p>\n<p>    We have developed a mathematical model to capture dynamic    chromatin organization in the nucleus, in terms of its    compaction into the heterochromatic phase or decompaction into    the euchromatic phase (Fig.1a). We treat the    meso-scale genomic organization as a dynamic,    far-from-equilibrium process, governed by the energetics of    phase-separation in conjunction with the kinetics of epigenetic    reactions and the formation of chromatin loops aided by    supercoiled DNA extrusion through cohesin due to    RNAPII-mediated transcription. The model ingredients are    depicted schematically in Fig.1a. We begin by    defining the energetics of the chromatin distribution in terms    of the entropic-enthalpic balance of chromatin-chromatin    interactions, the chromatin-lamina interactions as well as the    penalty on the formation of phase boundaries via Eq.    (6) (refer Methods, and    Supplementary Section S1.2 in the SI). The    gradients in the free-energy landscape, defined as the chemical    potential (refer Supplementary Eq. (S3)), drive the    dynamic evolution of chromatin towards the two energy wells    corresponding to the euchromatin and heterochromatin phases via    Eq. (7a, b) (refer Methods,    Supplementary Section (S1.4) in the SI).    Interconversion of the two phases of chromatin can occur via    (a) epigenetic regulation of histone acetylation and    methylation (Fig.1b), and (b)    supercoiling-driven extrusion of chromatin loops from    heterochromatin into euchromatin along the phase boundaries    (Eq. (7b)) as shown in    Fig.1c.  <\/p>\n<p>            a Schematic of a portion of a nucleus showing            the multiple mechanisms involved in chromatin            organization such as chromatin-chromatin interactions,            the chromatin-lamina interactions and epigenetic            regulation. Additionally, extrusion of chromatin loops            due to DNA supercoiling  which is increased by            transcriptional activity  also plays a role in            meso-scale genomic organization. While this may occur            within either chromatin phases (red circle), we further            explore the role of chromatin loop extrusion at the            heterochromatin-euchromatin interface (black circle).            b The model captures the chromatin-chromatin            interaction energetics via a double well free energy            description as shown in the contour plot. The two wells            correspond to the heterochromatin (red circle) and            euchromatin phases (blue circle). Any initial            configuration (light blue circle) spontaneously            decomposes into these wells at steady state. The            dynamics of this transition are governed by diffusion            and reaction kinetics comprising of epigenetic            regulation and kinetics of supercoiling-driven            chromatin extrusion (red box inset). c Loading            of cohesin assisted by NIPBL\/MAU2 initiates the            formation of chromatin loops. Cohesin can also be            dynamically unloaded via unloading factors viz.            WAPL\/PDS5. Active processes such as RNAPII mediated            transcription further drive the extrusion of trapped            DNA, supercoiling it into chromatin loops.          <\/p>\n<p>    The process of phase separation is initiated by adding a random    perturbation to the initially uniform chromatin configuration    (as shown in Fig.2a, left panel) which    captures the intrinsic intranuclear heterogeneities. As the    simulation progresses heterochromatin domains (in red, center    panel of Fig.2a) spontaneously    nucleate and grow. The evolution ultimately stabilizes    resulting in a steady state (right panel of    Fig.2a) with a    quasi-periodic distribution of stable domains of    heterochromatin rich phase (({phi    }_{h}={phi }_{h}^{max })) in red and euchromatin rich    phase (left({phi    }_{h}=0right)) in blue. Each of these domains are    nearly circular (see Supplementary Section S2 of SI for a    discussion on non-circular lamellar domains) with    characteristic sizes. Concomitantly, heterochromatin domains    localized to the nuclear lamina (called LADs) of comparable    sizes appear in our simulations (Fig.2a).  <\/p>\n<p>            a Visualization of the chromatin organization            obtained from the simulations. The initial chromatin            organization is a homogenous distribution with a small            perturbation added, resulting in nucleation of            heterochromatin domains (center panel) which grow into            heterochromatin domains of characteristic sizes at a            steady state. b Super-resolution visualizations            of chromatin organization observed in-vivo via STORM            imaging of HeLa nuclei (left panel, scale bar 3m,            data previously reported in ref. 19,            n=19 nuclei) and ChromSTEM imaging of BJ            fibroblast nuclei (right panel, scale bar 1m,            n=1 nucleus) show that chromatin organization            in nucleus is characterized by interspersed            heterochromatic domains of comparable sizes. c            The smooth boundaries of the chromatin packing domains            as seen in ChromSTEM observations are captured by the            model. d Numerically predicted trend of sizes of            heterochromatin domains as the transcription-mediated            chromatin extrusion rate increases. e Schematic            diagrams of the step-by step events (events i through            vi) involved in the nucleation, growth and            stabilization of heterochromatin domains at a steady            state. f Plot of theoretically evaluated growth            rate of heterochromatin domains with (red) and without            (blue) reactions. Reactions give rise to a stable            domain radius. In the absence of reactions, no stable            heterochromatin domain length scales are observed.            g The evaluation of stable radius (blue) and            stable LAD thickness (red) as transcription mediated            surface reactions are changed. Here, the relative            radius is defined as the steady state radius relative            to its value when transcription is zero, i.e., relative            radius = ({widetilde{R}}_{d}^{{SS}}\/{widetilde{R}}_{d}^{{SS}}|{Gamma            }_{a}=0). The relative LAD thickness is            similarly defined.          <\/p>\n<p>    The meso-scale distribution of chromatin throughout the nucleus    predicted by the mathematical model presents a striking    qualitative similarity with the experimentally observed    distribution of DNA in the nucleus using ChromSTEM, and STORM    as reported previously19    (Fig.2b). Domains of    compacted chromatin with a characteristic size are observed via    a high histone density distinguished from regions of low    histone density (Fig.2b). Lastly, the    preferential accumulation of heterochromatin domains along the    nuclear periphery seen via STORM imaging    (Fig.2b), again with similar    size scale, is also in excellent agreement with the    experiments.  <\/p>\n<p>    When defining the free energy density of chromatin organization    in the nucleus (see Supplementary Eq. (S1) in SI), we    penalized the formation of sharp interfaces via an interface    penalty (eta), defined as    the energy cost associated with the formation of the interfaces    between heterochromatin and euchromatin phases. As we show in    the SI (Supplementary Section S1.5), the energy    penalty (eta) results in    the formation of a smooth rather than a sharp interface between    the heterochromatin and the euchromatin phases. Numerical    simulations of chromatin organization exhibit such smooth    interfaces around chromatin domains, as shown in the zoomed in    image in Fig.2c (right panel). The    width of the interface (delta) is controlled by the    competition between the interfacial and bulk energy    contributions (refer Supplementary Section S1.5).  <\/p>\n<p>    Smooth chromatin phase boundaries are indeed observed in-vivo    via Chrom-STEM imaging (Supplementary Section S1.11). We    characterized the 3D chromatin density around individual    heterochromatin domains in a BJ fibroblast nucleus using    Chrom-STEM (Fig.2c, left panel;    Supplementary Fig.S5). We estimated the    average chromatin density within concentric circles emerging    from the center of individual domains to the periphery    (Fig.2c, Supplementary    Fig.S5). The chromatin    density was highest at the core of the domain and dropped    slowly from the center of the domain to the periphery. The    smooth decrease in radial density indicates that the chromatin    domain boundaries are not abrupt (Fig.2c), in agreement with    the numerical simulations.  <\/p>\n<p>    We next investigate how the size scaling of the heterochromatin    domains is regulated by the epigenetic reactions  acetylation    and methylation of histones  and supercoiling-driven chromatin    extrusion which together can lead to interconversion between    heterochromatin and euchromatin. First, we see that in the    absence of the epigenetic reactions and chromatin extrusion    multiple domains of a characteristic size are not obtained as    shown in Supplementary Fig.S10 (detailed    discussion in Supplementary Section S5). In this case,    although nucleation of multiple heterochromatin domains occurs    even without reactions (Supplementary Fig.S10a), all of them    merge into a single large cluster driven by Ostwald ripening so    as to minimize the interface formation.  <\/p>\n<p>    The model also predicts that the size of the heterochromatin    domains in the interior and periphery can be regulated by the    epigenetic reaction rates of acetylation and methylation as    shown in Supplementary Fig.S6 (Supplementary    Section S2). We see that as    methylation increases the size of the interior domains    increases too. On the other hand, increase in acetylation    results in the formation of smaller heterochromatin domains.    The trends followed by the domains towards the interior of the    nucleus are replicated by the LADs as well. Lastly, we identify    that the size scales of the domains  the domain radii in the    interior of the nucleus and the LAD thickness along its    periphery  depend on the level of transcription governed    supercoiling-driven chromatin extrusion rate ({widetilde{Gamma }}_{a})    (Fig.2d, Supplementary    Fig.S6). We note that, as    the transcription (({widetilde{Gamma }}_{a})) is    increased, the sizes of the heterochromatin domains decrease,    both in the interior as well as at the periphery. At the same    time, we also note that as chromatin extrusion rate is    increased, the average volume fraction of heterochromatin    (left({bar{phi    }}_{h}right)) in the nucleus decreases, while that of    euchromatin (left({bar{phi    }}_{e}right)) increases.  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, we theoretically predict an explicit dependence of the    sizes of interior heterochromatic domains and LADs on    epigenetic and transcription reactions and the diffusion    kinetics of the epigenetic marks.  <\/p>\n<p>    Intuitively, in the presence of more repressive methylation the    overall heterochromatin content in the nucleus should increase,    while in higher histone acetylation conditions the overall    euchromatin content will increase. Thus, the epigenetic    reactions can independently determine the average volume    fractions of each form of chromatin, thereby breaking the    detailed balance condition where the free energies of each    phase determine their relative abundance in a thermodynamic    equilibrium. A mathematical relation between the average volume    fraction of each chromatin phase and the epigenetic reaction    parameters can be determined by averaging the chromatin    evolution equation (Eq. (7b)) at a steady    state (i.e. (frac{partial    {{{{{{rm{phi }}}}}}}_{{{{{{rm{d}}}}}}}}{partial    widetilde{t}}=0)). In the absence of transcription    driven chromatin extrusion (i.e. ({widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}=0)), we see    that the epigenetic kinetics regulates the average    heterochromatin content of the nucleus as, ({bar{phi }}_{h}approx    frac{{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}},left(1-{bar{phi    }}_{n}right)}{{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}+1})    (Supplementary Eq. (S23), refer    Supplementary Section S3 for more details).  <\/p>\n<p>    The presence of transcription-mediated loop extrusion kinetics    (i.e., ({widetilde{Gamma }}_{a},    ne , 0) in Eq. (7b)) further    augments the deviation from thermodynamic equilibrium (i.e.,    the breaking of detail balance) via surface reactions that    actively extrude DNA at the interface of heterochromatic    domains. In the presence of transcription, the average    heterochromatin (and euchromatin) content in the nucleus    becomes (refer Supplementary Eq. (S22)),  <\/p>\n<p>      $$begin{array}{c}{bar{phi      }}_{h}, approx , frac{{widetilde{Gamma      }}_{{me}},left(1-{bar{phi      }}_{n}right)}{{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}+1+kappa      {widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}},,{bar{phi }}_{e}, approx ,      frac{left(1+kappa {widetilde{Gamma      }}_{a}right),left(1-{bar{phi      }}_{n}right)}{{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}+1+kappa      {widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}},end{array}$$    <\/p>\n<p>      (1)    <\/p>\n<p>    where (kappa) is a function    of ({{{{{{rm{phi    }}}}}}}_{{{{{{rm{h}}}}}}}^{max }), volume fraction    change across the interface (Delta    phi), and the length of the interface between the two    chromatin phases (refer Supplementary Section S3 for derivation).    Since supercoiling-mediated chromatin extrusion converts the    tightly packed heterochromatin into low density    transcriptionally active euchromatin phase, as extrusion rate    ({widetilde{Gamma }}_{a})    increases, the average heterochromatin content decreases.  <\/p>\n<p>    Thus, the overall mean chromatin composition of the nucleus    (left({bar{phi }}_{h},{bar{phi    }}_{e}right)) is determined by the reaction kinetics    of epigenetic regulation along with transcription. The reaction    kinetics alone would drive a homogenous chromatin organization    with (left({bar{phi    }}_{h},{bar{phi }}_{e}right)). On the (left({phi }_{d},{phi }_{n}right))    phase space we see that the average composition (shown as a    light blue circle in Fig.1b) determined by    reactions is energetically unfavorable  it does not lie in the    energy wells  and hence must evolve in time.  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, we show that the average composition of the two chromatin    phases, shown in Fig.2e(i), plays a key role    in the emergence of the characteristic sizes of the    heterochromatin domains. To illustrate this, we first observe    that the mean chromatin composition (left({bar{phi }}_{h},{bar{phi    }}_{e}right)) lies in neither of the energy wells as    shown in Fig.1b (light blue circle)    and is thus energetically unfavorable. The need to reduce the    total free energy in the nucleus drives the system to phase    separate by nucleating heterochromatin domains    (Fig.2e(iii)) corresponding    to the red energy well labeled heterochromatin in    Fig.1b surrounded by    euchromatin domains corresponding to the dark blue energy well    labeled euchromatin. The events entailing the individual steps    in the nucleation and growth of a single droplet of    heterochromatin due to phase separation, as shown in    Fig.2e, are as follows:  <\/p>\n<p>        Due to phase separation, the heterochromatin volume        fraction immediately outside the droplet is ({phi }_{h}=0) corresponding to the        euchromatic energy well. Far away from the droplet, the        mean composition (left({bar{phi }}_{h},{bar{phi        }}_{e}right)) remains undisturbed. The resulting        spatial gradient in the chromatin composition (blue curve        in Fig.2e(iv)) sets up a        diffusive flux of heterochromatin into the droplet,        allowing it to grow.      <\/p>\n<p>        On the other hand, within the heterochromatin droplet (with        ({phi }_{h}={phi }_{h}^{max        })) histone acetylation reactions will allow        conversion of heterochromatin inside the droplet into        euchromatin outside. Active supercoiling-mediated chromatin        loop extrusion further adds to the heterochromatin outflux.        Together loop extrusion and acetylation oppose the        diffusive influx of heterochromatin and thereby reduce the        size of the droplet (Fig.2e).      <\/p>\n<p>        Based on the above observations, the rate at which the        nucleated heterochromatin droplet grows can be written in        terms of the balance of reaction-diffusion gradient driven        influx and acetylation and transcription driven outflux of        heterochromatin as (refer Supplementary Section        S4, Supplementary        Eq. (S25)),      <\/p>\n<p>          $$4pi          {widetilde{R}}_{d}^{2}frac{d{widetilde{R}}_{d}}{dwidetilde{t}}=,underbrace{{4pi          {widetilde{R}}_{d}{bar{phi          }}_{h}}}_{{{{{{mathrm{inwards}}}}}} ,          {{{{{mathrm{diffusion}}}}}}} -          underbrace{{frac{4}{3}pi {widetilde{R}}_{d}^{3}{phi          }_{h}^{max          }}}_{begin{array}{c}{{{{{mathrm{Acetylation}}}}}} ,          {{{{{mathrm{working}}}}}}\\ {{{{{mathrm{against}}}}}}          , {{{{{mathrm{inwards}}}}}}\\          {{{{{mathrm{diffusion}}}}}}end{array}}-underbrace{{4pi          {widetilde{R}}_{d}^{2}frac{delta          }{2}{widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}{phi }_{h}^{max          }}}_{begin{array}{c}{{{{{mathrm{Chromatin}}}}}} ,          {{{{{mathrm{extrusion}}}}}} ,          {{{{{mathrm{working}}}}}}\\ {{{{{mathrm{against}}}}}}          , {{{{{mathrm{inwards}}}}}}\\          {{{{{mathrm{diffusion}}}}}}end{array}}$$        <\/p>\n<p>          (2)        <\/p>\n<p>        where (delta) is the        rescaled width of the interface, which is in turn related        to the length scale obtained via the competition between        the interfacial energy and chromatin-chromatin interaction        (refer Supplementary Section S1.5). The        resulting evolution of the droplet growth rate (left(d{widetilde{R}}_{d}\/dwidetilde{t}right))        as the radius of the droplet increases is shown in        Fig.2e. Notice the two        fixed points (Fig.2f, labeled        critical and stable radius) where (d{widetilde{R}}_{d}\/dwidetilde{t}=0).        Beyond the critical radius the domains grow in size.      <\/p>\n<p>        The second fixed point (stable radius) corresponds to the        rescaled steady state (i.e., (d{widetilde{R}}_{d}\/dwidetilde{t}=0))        heterochromatin domain size as determined by the active        epigenetic and the transcriptional regulation in tandem        with passive diffusion, and can be written as (derivation        shown in Supplementary Section S4, Supplementary        Eq. (S27)),      <\/p>\n<p>      $$begin{array}{c}{widetilde{R}}_{d}^{{ss}}=-frac{3{widetilde{Gamma      }}_{a}delta }{4}+sqrt{{left(frac{3{widetilde{Gamma      }}_{a}delta }{4}right)}^{2}+frac{3}{{phi }_{h}^{max      }}frac{{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}left(1-{bar{phi      }}_{n}right)}{1+{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}+kappa      {widetilde{Gamma }}_{a},}}.end{array}$$    <\/p>\n<p>      (3)    <\/p>\n<p>    From Eq. (3), we observe that the    steady state droplet radius (left({widetilde{R}}_{d}^{{ss}}right))    depends on both diffusion and reaction kinetics. With increase    in methylation, ({widetilde{R}}_{d}^{{ss}}) increases    implying bigger heterochromatin domains. On the other hand,    with increase in either the acetylation or    transcription-mediated loop extrusion the steady state radius    decreases. The quantitative dependence of the steady state    radius on transcriptional kinetics is shown in    Fig.2g (blue solid line).    Note that the steady state radius shown in    Fig.2g is normalized    relative to the steady state radius with no transcription.    Thus, our theory predicts an increase in the sizes of compacted    chromatin domains in the interior of the nucleus upon    inhibition of transcription.  <\/p>\n<p>    The size dependence of chromatin domains along the nuclear    periphery can be similarly determined by the balance of    reaction, transcription, and diffusion kinetics for the LADs.    The affinity of chromatin to the nuclear periphery due to the    chromatin-lamina interactions in Eq. (6) induces a    preferential nucleation of LADs. A schematic representation of    heterochromatin compaction along the nuclear periphery    resulting in LAD growth is shown in Fig.2e. As with the    interior heterochromatin droplet, phase-separation drives the    heterochromatin compaction (left({phi }_{h}={phi }_{h}^{max    }right)) within the LADs, while the chromatin    immediately outside corresponds to the euchromatin energy    minimal well (left({phi    }_{h}=0right)). Far away from the peripheral LAD    nucleation sites, the chromatin composition remains undisturbed    at the average composition of (left({bar{phi }}_{h},{bar{phi    }}_{e}right)). The variation of chromatin composition    with distance from nuclear periphery is shown in    Fig.2e (blue line). Like in    the case of the interior heterochromatin droplets, the    heterochromatin composition gradient driven diffusive influx is    balanced by the epigenetic and transcriptional regulated    heterochromatin outflux, which determines the rescaled    steady-state thickness of the LADs (refer to the Supplementary    Section S7, Supplementary Eq.    (S34)),  <\/p>\n<p>      $${widetilde{x}}_{t}^{{ss}}=frac{{widetilde{Gamma      }}_{{me}}left(1-{bar{phi }}_{n}right)}{{phi }_{h}^{max      }left(1+{widetilde{Gamma }}_{{me}}+kappa      {widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}right),}-frac{delta      {widetilde{Gamma }}_{a}}{2}$$    <\/p>\n<p>      (4)    <\/p>\n<p>    As with the interior domains, we observe that the LADs become    thicker with increase in methylation, while they become thinner    with increasing acetylation or chromatin extrusion rates. A    quantitative dependence of steady state LAD thickness on    transcription rate based on Eq. (4) is plotted in    Fig.2g (red dashed line).    Our theory predicts an increase in the sizes of LADs along the    nuclear periphery upon inhibition of transcription. While the    theoretical analysis helps develop a fundamental biophysical    understanding of the role of energetics and kinetics in    chromatin phase separation, a nucleus-wide chromatin    organization and its dynamic evolution can only be obtained    numerically.  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, we use the in-silico model to make testable quantitative    predictions of the meso-scale chromatin organization in the    nucleus. We also report the in-vivo nuclear chromatin    reorganization upon transcription inhibition using    complimentary STORM19 and ChromSTEM     on nuclei from multiple cell lines. The choice of the    parameters for rates of acetylation ({widetilde{Gamma }}_{{ac}}),    methylation ({widetilde{Gamma    }}_{{me}}), and the strength of chromatin-lamina    interactions ({widetilde{V}}_{L}), were held    constant for all the following simulations, and the choice of    the level of spatial noise is discussed in the Supplementary    Section S8. We calibrate the    active chromatin supercoiling-driven loop extrusion rate    ({Gamma }_{a}) to obtain an    in-silico change in the interior domain sizes quantitatively    comparable to that observed upon transcriptional inhibition.    The calibrated model is then used to predict the change in LAD    thickness due to inhibition of transcription, which upon    comparison with experimental images serves to validate the    model. A schematic for the workflow utilized to calibrate and    cross-validate the model predictions in the interior and along    periphery of the nucleus is shown in Supplementary Fig.    (S14) (Supplementary    Section S8).  <\/p>\n<p>    ChromSTEM was used to obtain super-resolution images in terms    of statistical descriptions of chromatin packing domains for BJ    fibroblasts. ChromSTEM allows the quantification of 3D    chromatin conformation with high resolution22. ChromSTEM mass    density tomograms were collected for BJ fibroblasts treated    with Actinomycin D (ActD) (Fig.3a, center) and    compared to DMSO treated mock controls    (Fig.3a, left) to evaluate    the average size and density of chromatin packing domains. We    have previously demonstrated that chromatin forms spatially    welldefined higherorder packing domains and that, within    these domains, chromatin exhibits a polymeric power-law scaling    behavior with radially decreasing mass density moving outwards    from the center of the domain23. As the    ChromSTEM intensity in the reconstructed tomogram is    proportional to the chromatin mass density, we estimated the    size of the domains based on where the chromatin mass scaling    and the radial chromatin density deviate from their predicted    behavior (discussed in Supplementary Section S1.11). Based on the    statistical analysis of individual packing domains, in a single    tomograph shown in Fig.3a, we observed 71    domains in DMSO and 48 domains in the ActD-treated nucleus. Of    the identified domains, the average domain radius ((pm) S.E) of BJ cells treated with DMSO    and ActD was estimated to be 103.5 (pm) 4.73nm and 129.7 (pm) 6.78nm, respectively    (Fig.3a, right panel),    representing a 20.2% increase in size. Overall, fewer domain    centers, and larger chromatin packing domains were    experimentally observed upon ActD treatment compared to the    control.  <\/p>\n<p>            a ChromSTEM tomogram reconstructions for DMSO            (left panel) and ActD treated (center panel) BJ            fibroblasts. The domains radii for BJ cells treated            ActD (right panel, n=48 domains) show 1.25            times (unpaired two tail t-test, p=0.002)            increase compared to control (n=71 domains).            b Representative live-cell PWS images (1-hour            ActD treatment). Scale bars=5m. Box plots compare            the domain sizes between DMSO control and ActD treated            cells. Sample size  HCT116: n=63 nuclei            (control), 65 (ActD), p=0.05; A549:            n=102 (control), 84 (ActD), p=1e7;            U2OS: n=116 (control), 75 (ActD),            p=1e12; n=103 (control), 150 (ActD),            p=0.04. c Heatmap density of DNA            super-resolution images in DMSO control (left panel,            n=19 nuclei) and ActD (right panel,            n=20 nuclei) treated HeLa nuclei. All scale            bars  3m. d Loss of chromatin loop extrusion            due to absence of RNAPII results in increased            heterochromatin domain size (in red, nucleosomes not            shown for clarity). e Numerical prediction of            chromatin organization in DMSO control and ActD treated            nucleus. f Zoomed in views of DMSO and ActD            treated nuclei localized to the nucleus interior (top            panels) and the periphery (bottom panels). Red and blue            boxes shown in c are zoomed into. All scale bars            1m. g Left: Simulations predict domains in            ActD nuclei are on average 1.63 times larger than in            DMSO nuclei (n=127 (DMSO), 77 (ActD) unpaired            two tail t-test, p=0) while LADs are 1.37            times thicker (n=38 (DMSO), 15 (ActD);            unpaired two tail t-test, p=0). Right: Domain            radii observed experimentally in ActD treated nuclei            (n=3584 loci, 20 nuclei) are 1.61 times            (unpaired two tail t-test, p=0) larger than in            DMSO nuclei (n=5830 loci,19 nuclei), while            LADs are 1.3 times thicker (n=1082 loci            (DMSO), 1015 loci (ActD), unpaired two tail t-test,            p=0.0006). All boxplots show the mean (cross),            median (horizontal line), upper and bottom quartiles            (box outlines) and the maximum and minimum non-outlier            data points (whiskers). All source data are provided as            a source data file.          <\/p>\n<p>    In addition to evaluating domain properties using ChromSTEM, we    utilized live-cell partial wave spectroscopy (PWS) imaging to    observe the change in chromatin organization after    transcription inhibition in various cell lines    (Fig.3b). The PWS images    demonstrate a significant reduction in average chromatin    packing scaling upon ActD treatment in live cells across four    different cell types. Next, the size of the domains is    quantitatively approximated via polymer scaling relationships    discussed in Supplementary Section S1.1322,24. The    quantification of the domain sizes (boxplots in    Fig.3b) shows that, for all    cell types studied, packing domains are larger for upon    transcription inhibition with ActD treatment  in agreement    with the ChromSTEM results on BJ fibroblasts.  <\/p>\n<p>    Additionally, we have previously used STORM imaging to observe    the nucleus wide changes in chromatin organization caused by    transcription abrogation in HeLa nuclei after ActD    treatment19. Heatmaps of    chromatin density obtained via Voronoi tessellation-based    color-coding of STORM images (see19 for analysis)    are shown in Fig.3c. The zoomed in    images of heatmaps of the chromatin cluster density    (Fig.3f) clearly show the    increasing heterochromatin domain sizes when RNAPII activity is    inhibited, in agreement with our theoretical and numerical    predictions (Fig.2d, e). Importantly, we    see that the changes in chromatin organization occur not only    in the interior domains of the nucleus but also along its    periphery (Fig.3f, g).  <\/p>\n<p>    Altogether these complementary imaging techniques establish    that nucleus wide increase in sizes of compacted chromatin    domains occurs upon the loss of transcription in a wide range    of cell lines.  <\/p>\n<p>    The chromatin cluster density maps obtained from STORM imaging    were further analyzed to quantify the sizes of heterochromatin    domains after DMSO and ActD treatment. A density-based    threshold was used to isolate the high-density heterochromatin    regions, which were then clustered via a density based spatial    clustering algorithm (see Supplementary Section S1.8) and further    sub-classified into LADs and interior domains depending on the    distance from nuclear periphery (Supplementary Section    S1.9). The    quantitatively extracted distribution of interior    heterochromatin domain radii for DMSO and ActD treated nuclei    shows that their mean radius after transcription inhibition was    nearly 1.61 times that in DMSO controls    (Fig.3g).  <\/p>\n<p>    Indeed, our model (Eq 3-4,    Fig.2d, g) predicts that    loss of transcription results in increased heterochromatin    domain size. This is because under control conditions,    extrusion of heterochromatin phase into euchromatin occurs. We    assume, based on previous experimental    findings19, that the    presence of RNAPII activity drives the supercoiling of the DNA    loop, thereby extruding it from the heterochromatin phase into    the euchromatin phase at the phase boundaries    (Fig.3c, left panel).    However, when RNAPII is inhibited with ActD treatment    (Fig.3c, right panel), the    absence of this driving force for supercoiling-mediated loop    extrusion keeps more DNA in the heterochromatin phase thereby    increasing the domain sizes. The in-silico chromatin    distribution predicted under control (left panel) and    transcription inhibited (({Gamma    }_{a}=0), right panel) conditions is shown in    Fig.3e. The phase separated    heterochromatin domains (left({phi    }_{h}={phi }_{h}^{max }right)) are shown in red in a    loosely compacted euchromatin background (blue, ({phi }_{h}=0)). We quantify the change    in the sizes of the heterochromatin domains predicted by the    model as the active extrusion rate ({Gamma }_{a}) is parametrically    varied. The value of ({Gamma    }_{a}) under control conditions is chosen    (Supplementary TableS2) such that the    change in the interior domain sizes with respect to    transcription inhibition (with ({Gamma }_{a}=0)) is quantitatively the    same as observed experimentally.  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, we quantitatively validate the choice of ({Gamma }_{a}) under control conditions    by comparing the predicted change in LAD thickness against that    quantified from the STORM images. Our theoretical predictions    (Eq. (4)) show that the    reduction in transcription increases the thickness of the LADs    reflecting the behavior predicted in the interior of the    nucleus (Fig.2d, g). Our simulations    of chromatin distribution in the nucleus    (Fig.3e) show that    inhibition of transcription (({Gamma }_{a}=0)) results in thicker    LADs. Of note, the chromatin-lamina interaction strength    (left({V}_{L}right)) stays    unchanged between the two simulations. Yet, we see a higher    association of chromatin with the periphery. Upon quantitative    comparison (Fig.3g, left panel) we see    that the LADs grow approximately 1.37 times thicker upon loss    of transcription.  <\/p>\n<p>    To validate this prediction, we compare the predicted change in    LAD thickness with that quantified from in-vivo STORM imaging.    (Fig.3g, refer to    Supplementary Sections S1.8 and    S1.9 for procedure).    The quantified comparison of LAD thickness between DMSO and    ActD nuclei (Fig.3g) shows nearly 1.3    times increase upon ActD treatment, in close quantitative    agreement with the model prediction. Overall, with both model    predictions and cellular observations, our results suggest that    impairment of transcription plays a significant role in    determining the size scaling of the interior heterochromatin    domains and LADs.  <\/p>\n<p>    We next enquire how, in addition to altering the size of the    compacted domains, abrogation of transcription changes the    extent of DNA packing. For this we analyzed the chromatin    distribution in HeLa nuclei under DMSO and ActD treatments from    STORM images previously generated19. Under control    conditions the distribution of DNA is qualitatively more    homogenous while ActD treated nuclei exhibit more isolated    distinct domains of compacted chromatin surrounded by region of    very low chromatin density (Fig.4a). For    quantification, we plot the chromatin intensity along a    horizontal line chosen to run across two heterochromatin    domains with euchromatin between them (see zoomed images in    Fig.4b, blue and red    horizontal line). The chromatin intensity, plotted in    Fig.4c (in blue) shows that    even in the euchromatin region, the DNA presence is    substantial. On the other hand, chromatin intensity across a    horizontal line chosen across a heterochromatin domain in ActD    nucleus (Fig.4b, c; in red) shows a    much steeper gradient outside the domain.  <\/p>\n<p>            a Grayscale heatmap density rendering of            super-resolution images of DNA in control (DMSO, left            panel, n=19 nuclei) and actinomycin D (ActD,            right panel, n=20 nuclei) treated HeLa nuclei.            All scale bars  3m. b Zoomed in views of DMSO            and ActD treated nuclei. Boxes shown in a are            zoomed into. All scale bars - 1m. c Along the            blue (DMSO) and red (ActD) line segments, we plot the            chromatin heatmap intensity (corresponding to the total            DNA content) for the DMSO-treated control nucleus (in            blue) and ActD-treated nucleus (in red). The            DMSO-treated nucleus shows a wider distribution of            small heterochromatin domains, while the ActD treated            nucleus shows a greater compaction with isolated large            heterochromatin domains. d Numerical prediction            of distribution of total DNA (in grayscale) in a            nucleus with (DMSO) and without (ActD) transcription            mediated chromatin extrusion. e Distribution of            total DNA content along the blue (red) line in d            under DMSO (ActD) treatment. The black dashed line            shows the level of total DNA predicted in the            euchromatin phase of DMSO and ActD treated nuclei.          <\/p>\n<p>    The increased presence of DNA in the euchromatic phase in    presence of transcription as observed experimentally is    captured by the simulations. The in-silico distribution of DNA    (measured as the sum of volume fractions of the chromatin    phases, ({phi }_{e}+{phi    }_{h})) in a nuclear region far from LADs is plotted in    Fig.4d for control and    transcription inhibited in-silico nuclei. We see that the    euchromatic phase (outside white circles) is darker when    transcription is inhibited, indicating the presence of much    lesser DNA than in control euchromatin. A quantification of the    total DNA along cut-lines chosen in the control and ActD    in-silico nuclei confirm the observations    (Fig.4e).  <\/p>\n<p>    Since the lack of transcription inhibits supercoiling-mediated    chromatin loop extrusion from heterochromatin into euchromatin,    we see a reduced density of DNA in the euchromatin phase of the    nucleus under ActD conditions. Further, due to the lack of    chromatin extrusion out of the heterochromatin domains when    transcription is inhibited, we also observe that they are    larger in size. Thus, transcription, via chromatin loop    extrusion, results in removal of DNA from compacted    heterochromatin region by converting it into active euchromatin    form.  <\/p>\n<p>    Taken together, our results suggest that transcription not only    affects the scaling of the lengths (radius or thickness) of the    heterochromatin domains, but also significantly changes the    relative amounts of DNA in the euchromatin and heterochromatin    phases.  <\/p>\n<p>    We have established that change in transcription activity    affects the global chromatin organization of the nucleus via    altered supercoiling mediated loop extrusion. In turn,    chromatin loop extrusion is initiated by the loading of cohesin    onto DNA via a balance between cohesin loaders such as NIPBL    and cohesin unloaders like WAPL (Fig.1c2,12,25,26). If the    chromatin loop extrusion is responsible for the global    chromatin reorganization, altering the cohesin    loading\/unloading balance must also result in chromatin    reorganization. Thus, next, we study the chromatin arrangement    in WAPL-deficient (WAPL) nuclei marked by increased levels of    loaded cohesin.  <\/p>\n<p>    In vivo, WAPL depletion causes an accumulation of large amounts    of cohesin on chromatin27. This results in    a much more homogenous distribution of DNA, which was    previously termed blending due to excessive extrusion of    chromatin loops, as shown schematically in    Fig.5a19. In our    mathematical model, WAPL deficiency is simulated as an increase    in the rate of chromatin extrusion (({Gamma }_{a})). Based on the    theoretical size scaling of the interior heterochromatin    domains and LADs, as seen from Eq. (3) and    Fig.2g, our model predicts    that increase in ({Gamma    }_{a}) would result in a decrease in the radius of the    steady state heterochromatin domains (Fig.5b).  <\/p>\n<p>            a Schematic representation of chromatin loop            extrusion. WAPL-depletion results in increased cohesin            loading and excessive transcription-driven chromatin            loop extrusion. Note that nucleosomes, despite being            present, are not shown to improve clarity. b            Numerical prediction of distribution of heterochromatin            domains in the interior and the LADs along the            periphery (all domains in red) in a nucleus without            (Cas9) and with (WAPL) cohesin unloading disruption.            c Heatmap density of DNA super-resolution images            in d control (Cas9, left panel) and WAPL            knock-out (WAPL) treated HeLa nuclei. All scale bars -            3m. d Left: Zoomed in views of Cas9 and WAPL            treated nuclei focusing on the interior heterochromatin            domains. White solid boxes shown in c are zoomed            into. All scale bars - 1m. Right: Zoomed in views of            Cas9 and WAPL treated nuclei along the nuclear            periphery. White dashed boxes shown in c are            zoomed into. All scale bars - 1m. e            Quantification of heterochromatin domain radius in the            interior of Cas9- and WAPL - treated nuclei.            (n=2386 loci in 6 nuclei for Cas9-treatment            and 2416 loci in 7 nuclei for WAPL treatment). WAPL            treated nuclei exhibit a significantly lower            ((sim) 0.86 times)            mean heterochromatin radius (unpaired two-tailed            t-test, p=6e10). Quantification of LAD            thickness along the periphery of Cas9- and WAPL -            treated nuclei. (n=219 loci in 6 nuclei for            Cas9-treatment and 169 loci in 7 nuclei for WAPL            treatment). WAPL treated nuclei exhibit a            significantly lower ((sim) 0.43 times) mean LAD            thickness (unpaired two-tailed t-test,            p=1e13). f Boxplot in left panel shows            the distribution of domain radii predicted numerically.            WAPL nuclei have a mean domain radius 0.8 times that            of Cas9-treated nuclei (unpaired two-tailed t-test,            p=0). Boxplot in right panels shows the            distribution of LAD thicknesses predicted numerically.            WAPL nuclei have a mean LAD thickness 0.82 times that            of Cas9-treated nuclei. All boxplots show the mean            (cross), median (horizontal line), upper and bottom            quartiles (box outlines) and the maximum and minimum            non-outlier data points (whiskers) of the plotted            distribution. All source data are provided as a source            data file.          <\/p>\n<p>    STORM images of HeLa nuclei without (labeled Cas9) and with    WAPL-deficiency previously revealed genome-wide changes in the    chromatin organization induced by excessive loading of cohesin    (Fig.5c,    d)19. A visual    comparison between representative zoomed-in regions (white    boxes in Fig.5c) demonstrates the    reduction of heterochromatin domain sizes in the interior of    the nuclei in WAPL nuclei (Fig.5d). Using clustering    analysis (refer Supplementary Section S1.8 and    S1.9), we quantify    the altered chromatin domain sizes in control and WAPL HeLa    cell nuclei. We observe that WAPL nuclei with increased    chromatin blending have heterochromatin domains with a mean    radius approximately 15% smaller than control nuclei    (Fig.5e).  <\/p>\n<p>    In-silico, we parametrically vary the active chromatin    extrusion rate ({Gamma    }_{a}) above the control level    (SupplementaryTable S2, determined    forcontrol treatment). The value of ({Gamma }_{a}) for WAPL nuclei is    chosen (Supplementary TableS2) such that the    decrease in the size of interior heterochromatin domains    reduces by 15% (Fig.5f) to agree with the    experimental observation (Fig.5e).  <\/p>\n<p>    As discussed previously (Fig.2g), the model predicts    that the effects of chromatin extrusion observed in the    interior domains of the nucleus are replicated along the    nuclear periphery. Simulation of nuclear chromatin organization    (Fig.5b) reveals that by    changing only the rate of chromatin extrusion ({Gamma }_{a}), keeping all other    parameters including chromatin-lamina interaction potential    ({V}_{L}) constant, we see a    reduction in the association of chromatin with the lamina.    Specifically, a 2.5-fold increase in ({Gamma }_{a}) calibrated to occur due    to WAPL-deficiency predicts a 51.2% decrease in the average LAD    thickness, as shown in Fig.5f.  <\/p>\n<p>    The predicted change in LAD thickness is consistent with    previous experimental observations and was further    quantitatively validated by measuring the thickness of LADs in    STORM images of control and WAPL nuclei    (Fig.5e)19. A reduction in    the sizes of domains, as seen in the nucleus interior, can also    be observed at the nuclear periphery, as shown in a    representative zoomed in region (white dashed boxes in    Fig.5c) in    Fig.5d. The mean thickness    of the LADs at the nuclear periphery is approximately 20%    smaller for WAPL nuclei (Fig.5h) as compared to the    control-treated nuclei.  <\/p>\n<p>    Together, these results confirm that the meso-scale spatial    chromatin organization is strongly regulated by the chromatin    loop formation, and this effect can be modulated not only by    the transcription activity, but also by altering the extent of    loading or unloading of cohesin rings on the DNA. These results    provide further evidence for the link between transcriptional    regulation and nucleus-wide chromatin distribution via    transcription-driven supercoiling mediated chromatin loop    extrusion.  <\/p>\n<p>    Since we have established, via both quantitative analysis of    experimental data and simulations, that extrusion of chromatin    loops is governed by both cohesin loading\/unloading balance and    RNAPII mediated transcription, a question of their tandem role    emerges.  <\/p>\n<p>    To simulate the individual effects of cohesin loading and    transcriptional activity, we decompose the overall active    chromatin extrusion rate into its distinct constitutive steps.    The individual steps involved in the process of supercoiling    mediated chromatin loop extrusion from heterochromatin into    euchromatin (as discussed previously in Section Introduction)    are shown in Fig.6a. As a first step, a    balance between the loading of cohesin via    NIPBL\/MAU225 on chromatin    occurring at a rate ({Gamma    }_{l}) and its unloading via by    WAPL\/PDS52,12,26 occurring at a    rate ({Gamma }_{{ul}})    results in the association of cohesin rings with chromatin at    an overall rate ({Gamma    }_{{coh}}={Gamma }_{l}-{Gamma }_{{ul}}). In other    words, ({Gamma }_{{coh}})    denotes the overall rate of cohesin loading on DNA. The    entrapment of DNA by cohesin is followed by the extrusion of    supercoiled loops of chromatin via DNA supercoiling by the    RNAPII mediated transcription, at a rate denoted by    ({Gamma }_{{tr}}). Thus, as    shown in Fig.6a, by assuming a    first-order reaction kinetics for both steps, the overall rate    of active chromatin extrusion ({Gamma }_{a}) at the interface of    heterochromatin and euchromatin is proposed to be    multiplicatively decomposed as,  <\/p>\n<p>      $$begin{array}{c}{Gamma      }_{a}={Gamma }_{{tr}}{Gamma }_{{coh}}={Gamma      }_{{tr}}left({Gamma }_{l}-{Gamma      }_{{ul}}right)end{array}$$    <\/p>\n<p>      (5)    <\/p>\n<p>            a Schematic showing the associative sub-steps of            chromatin extrusion incorporating cohesin loading v\/s            unloading balance and active transcriptional work done            by RNAPII. The rate of active extrusion of chromatin            loops (left({Gamma            }_{a}right)) is determined by both sub-steps.            Note that nucleosomes, despite being present, are not            represented in this schematic to better display the            chromatin loops. b Numerical prediction of            distribution of heterochromatin domains in the interior            and the LADs along the periphery (all domains in red)            in a nucleus in control (Cas9-DMSO treatment, top-left            panel), transcription inhibited (Cas9-ActD, top right),            WAPL knock-out treated (WAPL-DMSO, bottom left) and            simultaneous WAPL knock-out along with transcription            inhibition treated (WAPL-ActD, bottom right). c            Heatmap density rendering of super-resolution images of            DNA in control (Cas9-DMSO treatment, left panel),            transcription inhibited (Cas9-ActD, center left), WAPL            knock-out treated (WAPL-DMSO, center right) and            simultaneous WAPL knock-out along with transcription            inhibition treated (WAPL-ActD) HeLa nuclei. All scale            bars  3m. d Quantification of heterochromatin            domain radius in the interior (plain colored boxes) as            well as the LAD thickness along the nuclear periphery            (hatched boxes) of Cas9-DMSO (3328 loci in 13 nuclei),            Cas9-ActD (4042 loci in 11 nuclei), WAPL-DMSO (1548            loci in 10 nulcei) and WAPL-ActD (1926 loci in 11            nuclei) treated nuclei. As previously, ActD treated            nuclei exhibited a significantly increased domain size            (unpaired two-tailed t-test, p=0) while WAPL            treated nuclei exhibit a significantly lower mean            heterochromatin radius (unpaired tw-tailed t-test,            p=0). However, the differences between            Cas9-ActD treated and WAPL-ActD treated nuclei was            insignificant (unpaired two-tailed t-test, p            (sim) 0.9). All            boxplots show the mean (cross), median (horizontal            line), upper and bottom quartiles (box outlines) and            the maximum and minimum non-outlier data points            (whiskers) of the plotted distribution. All source data            are provided as a source data file.          <\/p>\n<p>    In addition to the extrusion of loops via RNAPII mediated DNA    supercoiling activity12,13,19,28,29,30, in vitro    experiments proposed that cohesin once transiently loaded onto    DNA, could independently drive the formation of loops via its    ATPase machinery9,11,31,32,33. Cell based    experiments demonstrated that in WAPL cells, clusters of    cohesin in WAPL cells assemble together into vermicelli-like    structures and these structures disappear upon transcription    inhibition, but not upon partial loss of    cohesin19. These results,    taken together, present strong evidence for the important role    of transcription in powering cohesin mediated loop extrusion.    While the relative role of cohesins motor activity and    transcription in loop extrusion inside cells remains to be    determined, here we focus on the latter given the previous in    vivo experimental findings. We indeed show that a kinetic model    captured by Eq. (5) sufficiently    explains the effect of extrusion of the specific chromatin    loops extending from transcriptionally silenced heterochromatin    into genetically active euchromatin on determining the    meso-scale chromatin domain sizes.  <\/p>\n<p>    The chromatin organization is simulated in a nucleus under    control and transcription inhibition treatments for nuclei with    and without WAPL deficiency. The chromatin organization in a    control nucleus (labeled Cas9-DMSO), simulated via parameters    listed in Supplementary TableS1 is shown in    Fig.6b, top-left panel. The    individual inhibition of transcriptional activity without    affecting the cohesin loading (Cas9-ActD) results in a    chromatin organization with increased heterochromatin domains    sizes and LAD thickness, as shown in Fig.6b, top-right panel. On    the other hand, the simulation of chromatin distribution in    nucleus with depleted cohesin unloading, without disturbing the    transcriptional activity, (WAPL-DMSO) is shown in    Fig.6b, bottom-left panel.    Finally, the chromatin distribution predicted in a WAPL    nucleus with inhibited transcription (WAPL-DMSO-treatment) is    shown in Fig.6b, bottom-right panel.    As shown in Fig. 3e and Fig.    3g, ActD    (mathematically, ({Gamma    }_{{tr}}=0) in Eq. (5)) results in    larger heterochromatin domains and thicker LADs, while WAPL    nuclei (increased cohesin loading; mathematically, ({Gamma }_{{ul}}\/{Gamma }_{l})    increases in Eq. (5)) show the opposite    effect with smaller heterochromatin domains and LADs. For a    WAPL nuclei in which transcription is inhibited (WAPL  ActD;    mathematically, ({Gamma    }_{{tr}}=0) and ({Gamma    }_{{ul}}\/{Gamma }_{l}) increases in Eq.    (3)), the model predicts    that inhibition of transcription returns the chromatin    organization to the control (Cas9-ActD) levels. Transcription    inhibition thus blocks the reduction in chromatin domain sizes    induced due to WAPL deficiency due to lack of impetus for    chromatin supercoiling.  <\/p>\n<p>    To quantitatively validate the model predictions, we    investigate the in-vivo chromatin organization under individual    and tandem changes in transcription and cohesin unloading by    re-analyzing previously reported super-resolution images shown    as heatmap density plots in Fig.6c19. Visual    inspection of this data agrees with the model predictions that    transcriptional inhibition counteracts the chromatin blending    observed in DMSO treated WAPL nuclei, which was also    previously reported19. We thus focused    on extracting the radius of heterochromatin domains and LAD    thickness to further validate the model results quantitatively    (Fig.6d). Cas9  ActD    treated nuclei show an increased heterochromatin domain radius    compared to control while WAPL nuclei show a significant    reduction in domain radius and LAD thickness    (Fig.6d). However, WAPL     ActD treated nuclei show no significant difference in    comparison to Cas9  ActD treated nuclei    (Fig.6d), in quantitative    agreement with the numerical predictions.  <\/p>\n<p>    These results further confirm that the effect of transcription    on global chromatin distribution occurs via supercoiling    mediated chromatin loop extrusion, especially at the interface    of heterochromatin and euchromatin phases. Furthermore, these    results also present a significant validation of the    mathematical phase-field model of chromatin organization in the    nucleus.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read this article:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nature.com\/articles\/s41467-024-48698-z\" title=\"Active transcription and epigenetic reactions synergistically regulate meso-scale genomic organization - Nature.com\" rel=\"noopener\">Active transcription and epigenetic reactions synergistically regulate meso-scale genomic organization - Nature.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Numerical simulations capture experimentally observed features of chromatin organization We have developed a mathematical model to capture dynamic chromatin organization in the nucleus, in terms of its compaction into the heterochromatic phase or decompaction into the euchromatic phase (Fig.1a). We treat the meso-scale genomic organization as a dynamic, far-from-equilibrium process, governed by the energetics of phase-separation in conjunction with the kinetics of epigenetic reactions and the formation of chromatin loops aided by supercoiled DNA extrusion through cohesin due to RNAPII-mediated transcription. The model ingredients are depicted schematically in Fig.1a.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/genome\/active-transcription-and-epigenetic-reactions-synergistically-regulate-meso-scale-genomic-organization-nature-com\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[25],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1125187","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-genome"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1125187"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1125187"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1125187\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1125187"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1125187"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1125187"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}