Chromatin extrusion explains key features of loop and domain formation in wild-type and engineered genomes

Adrian L. Sanborn(Baylor College of Medicine), Suhas S.P. Rao(Baylor College of Medicine), Su-Chen Huang(Baylor College of Medicine), Neva C. Durand(Baylor College of Medicine), Miriam Huntley(Baylor College of Medicine), Andrew I. Jewett(Baylor College of Medicine), Ivan D. Bochkov(Baylor College of Medicine), Dharmaraj Chinnappan(Baylor College of Medicine), Ashok Cutkosky(Baylor College of Medicine), Jian Li(Baylor College of Medicine), Kristopher Geeting(Baylor College of Medicine), Andreas Gnirke(Broad Institute), Alexandre Melnikov(Broad Institute), Doug McKenna(Baylor College of Medicine), Elena K. Stamenova(Broad Institute), Eric S. Lander(Broad Institute), Erez Lieberman Aiden(Broad Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 23, 2015
Cited by 1,901Open Access
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Abstract

We recently used in situ Hi-C to create kilobase-resolution 3D maps of mammalian genomes. Here, we combine these maps with new Hi-C, microscopy, and genome-editing experiments to study the physical structure of chromatin fibers, domains, and loops. We find that the observed contact domains are inconsistent with the equilibrium state for an ordinary condensed polymer. Combining Hi-C data and novel mathematical theorems, we show that contact domains are also not consistent with a fractal globule. Instead, we use physical simulations to study two models of genome folding. In one, intermonomer attraction during polymer condensation leads to formation of an anisotropic "tension globule." In the other, CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) and cohesin act together to extrude unknotted loops during interphase. Both models are consistent with the observed contact domains and with the observation that contact domains tend to form inside loops. However, the extrusion model explains a far wider array of observations, such as why loops tend not to overlap and why the CTCF-binding motifs at pairs of loop anchors lie in the convergent orientation. Finally, we perform 13 genome-editing experiments examining the effect of altering CTCF-binding sites on chromatin folding. The convergent rule correctly predicts the affected loops in every case. Moreover, the extrusion model accurately predicts in silico the 3D maps resulting from each experiment using only the location of CTCF-binding sites in the WT. Thus, we show that it is possible to disrupt, restore, and move loops and domains using targeted mutations as small as a single base pair.


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