Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains

Abstract Background Localized functional domains within chromosomes, known as topologically associating domains (TADs), have been recently highlighted. In Drosophila, TADs are biochemically defined by epigenetic marks, this suggesting that the 3D arrangement may be the “missing link” between epigene...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Antony Lesage, Vincent Dahirel, Jean-Marc Victor, Maria Barbi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:Epigenetics & Chromatin
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13072-019-0269-6
id doaj-9dfa1a8eefbf4336bb35ab18327c46a2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9dfa1a8eefbf4336bb35ab18327c46a22020-11-25T03:01:16ZengBMCEpigenetics & Chromatin1756-89352019-05-0112111510.1186/s13072-019-0269-6Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domainsAntony Lesage0Vincent Dahirel1Jean-Marc Victor2Maria Barbi3CNRS, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée (LPTMC), Sorbonne UniversitéCNRS, Phenix, Sorbonne UniversitéCNRS, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée (LPTMC), Sorbonne UniversitéCNRS, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée (LPTMC), Sorbonne UniversitéAbstract Background Localized functional domains within chromosomes, known as topologically associating domains (TADs), have been recently highlighted. In Drosophila, TADs are biochemically defined by epigenetic marks, this suggesting that the 3D arrangement may be the “missing link” between epigenetics and gene activity. Recent observations (Boettiger et al. in Nature 529(7586):418–422, 2016) provide access to structural features of these domains with unprecedented resolution thanks to super-resolution experiments. In particular, they give access to the distribution of the radii of gyration for domains of different linear length and associated with different transcriptional activity states: active, inactive or repressed. Intriguingly, the observed scaling laws lack consistent interpretation in polymer physics. Results We develop a new methodology conceived to extract the best information from such super-resolution data by exploiting the whole distribution of gyration radii, and to place these experimental results on a theoretical framework. We show that the experimental data are compatible with the finite-size behavior of a self-attracting polymer. The same generic polymer model leads to quantitative differences between active, inactive and repressed domains. Active domains behave as pure polymer coils, while inactive and repressed domains both lie at the coil–globule crossover. For the first time, the “color-specificity” of both the persistence length and the mean interaction energy are estimated, leading to important differences between epigenetic states. Conclusion These results point toward a crucial role of criticality to enhance the system responsivity, resulting in both energy transitions and structural rearrangements. We get strong indications that epigenetically induced changes in nucleosome–nucleosome interaction can cause chromatin to shift between different activity states.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13072-019-0269-6Epigenetic domainsPolymerDrosophilaCoil–globulePhase transition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antony Lesage
Vincent Dahirel
Jean-Marc Victor
Maria Barbi
spellingShingle Antony Lesage
Vincent Dahirel
Jean-Marc Victor
Maria Barbi
Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
Epigenetics & Chromatin
Epigenetic domains
Polymer
Drosophila
Coil–globule
Phase transition
author_facet Antony Lesage
Vincent Dahirel
Jean-Marc Victor
Maria Barbi
author_sort Antony Lesage
title Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
title_short Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
title_full Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
title_fullStr Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
title_full_unstemmed Polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of Drosophila epigenetic domains
title_sort polymer coil–globule phase transition is a universal folding principle of drosophila epigenetic domains
publisher BMC
series Epigenetics & Chromatin
issn 1756-8935
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Localized functional domains within chromosomes, known as topologically associating domains (TADs), have been recently highlighted. In Drosophila, TADs are biochemically defined by epigenetic marks, this suggesting that the 3D arrangement may be the “missing link” between epigenetics and gene activity. Recent observations (Boettiger et al. in Nature 529(7586):418–422, 2016) provide access to structural features of these domains with unprecedented resolution thanks to super-resolution experiments. In particular, they give access to the distribution of the radii of gyration for domains of different linear length and associated with different transcriptional activity states: active, inactive or repressed. Intriguingly, the observed scaling laws lack consistent interpretation in polymer physics. Results We develop a new methodology conceived to extract the best information from such super-resolution data by exploiting the whole distribution of gyration radii, and to place these experimental results on a theoretical framework. We show that the experimental data are compatible with the finite-size behavior of a self-attracting polymer. The same generic polymer model leads to quantitative differences between active, inactive and repressed domains. Active domains behave as pure polymer coils, while inactive and repressed domains both lie at the coil–globule crossover. For the first time, the “color-specificity” of both the persistence length and the mean interaction energy are estimated, leading to important differences between epigenetic states. Conclusion These results point toward a crucial role of criticality to enhance the system responsivity, resulting in both energy transitions and structural rearrangements. We get strong indications that epigenetically induced changes in nucleosome–nucleosome interaction can cause chromatin to shift between different activity states.
topic Epigenetic domains
Polymer
Drosophila
Coil–globule
Phase transition
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13072-019-0269-6
work_keys_str_mv AT antonylesage polymercoilglobulephasetransitionisauniversalfoldingprincipleofdrosophilaepigeneticdomains
AT vincentdahirel polymercoilglobulephasetransitionisauniversalfoldingprincipleofdrosophilaepigeneticdomains
AT jeanmarcvictor polymercoilglobulephasetransitionisauniversalfoldingprincipleofdrosophilaepigeneticdomains
AT mariabarbi polymercoilglobulephasetransitionisauniversalfoldingprincipleofdrosophilaepigeneticdomains
_version_ 1724694076321693696