Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes
Dinoflagellates have some of the largest genome sizes, but lack architectural nucleosomes. Their liquid crystalline chromosomes (LCCs) are the only non-architectural protein-mediated chromosome packaging systems, having high degrees of DNA superhelicity, liquid crystalline condensation and high leve...
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doaj-590fe584f16c41568685e28a8b0f4eed2020-11-25T01:38:07ZengMDPI AGMicroorganisms2076-26072019-01-01722710.3390/microorganisms7020027microorganisms7020027Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline ChromosomesJoseph Tin Yum Wong0Division of Life Science, Hong Kong University of Life Science, Clearwater Bay, Kowloon, Hong KongDinoflagellates have some of the largest genome sizes, but lack architectural nucleosomes. Their liquid crystalline chromosomes (LCCs) are the only non-architectural protein-mediated chromosome packaging systems, having high degrees of DNA superhelicity, liquid crystalline condensation and high levels of chromosomal divalent cations. Recent observations on the reversible decompaction⁻recompaction of higher-order structures implicated that LCCs are composed of superhelical modules (SPMs) comprising highly supercoiled DNA. Orientated polarizing light photomicrography suggested the presence of three compartments with different packaging DNA density in LCCs. Recent and previous biophysical data suggest that LCCs are composed of: (a) the highly birefringent inner core compartment (i) with a high-density columnar-hexagonal mesophase (CH-m); (b) the lower-density core surface compartment (ii.1) consisting of a spiraling chromonema; (c) the birefringent-negative periphery compartment (ii.2) comprising peripheral chromosomal loops. C(ii.1) and C(ii.2) are in dynamic equilibrium, and can merge into a single compartment during dinomitosis, regulated through multiphasic reversible soft-matter phase transitions.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2607/7/2/27dinoflagellateliquid crystalline chromosomesliquid crystalline DNAphase transitionsuperhelical module5-hydroxymethyluracilnucleosomesuperhelical condensationchromosome |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Joseph Tin Yum Wong |
spellingShingle |
Joseph Tin Yum Wong Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes Microorganisms dinoflagellate liquid crystalline chromosomes liquid crystalline DNA phase transition superhelical module 5-hydroxymethyluracil nucleosome superhelical condensation chromosome |
author_facet |
Joseph Tin Yum Wong |
author_sort |
Joseph Tin Yum Wong |
title |
Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes |
title_short |
Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes |
title_full |
Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes |
title_fullStr |
Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Architectural Organization of Dinoflagellate Liquid Crystalline Chromosomes |
title_sort |
architectural organization of dinoflagellate liquid crystalline chromosomes |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Microorganisms |
issn |
2076-2607 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
Dinoflagellates have some of the largest genome sizes, but lack architectural nucleosomes. Their liquid crystalline chromosomes (LCCs) are the only non-architectural protein-mediated chromosome packaging systems, having high degrees of DNA superhelicity, liquid crystalline condensation and high levels of chromosomal divalent cations. Recent observations on the reversible decompaction⁻recompaction of higher-order structures implicated that LCCs are composed of superhelical modules (SPMs) comprising highly supercoiled DNA. Orientated polarizing light photomicrography suggested the presence of three compartments with different packaging DNA density in LCCs. Recent and previous biophysical data suggest that LCCs are composed of: (a) the highly birefringent inner core compartment (i) with a high-density columnar-hexagonal mesophase (CH-m); (b) the lower-density core surface compartment (ii.1) consisting of a spiraling chromonema; (c) the birefringent-negative periphery compartment (ii.2) comprising peripheral chromosomal loops. C(ii.1) and C(ii.2) are in dynamic equilibrium, and can merge into a single compartment during dinomitosis, regulated through multiphasic reversible soft-matter phase transitions. |
topic |
dinoflagellate liquid crystalline chromosomes liquid crystalline DNA phase transition superhelical module 5-hydroxymethyluracil nucleosome superhelical condensation chromosome |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2607/7/2/27 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT josephtinyumwong architecturalorganizationofdinoflagellateliquidcrystallinechromosomes |
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