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Multivalent binding proteins can drive collapse and reswelling of chromatin in confinement.

Sougata GuhaMithun K Mitra
Published in: Soft matter (2022)
Collapsed conformations of chromatin have been long suspected of being mediated by interactions with multivalent binding proteins, which can bring together distant sections of the chromatin fiber. In this study, we use Langevin dynamics simulation of a coarse grained chromatin polymer to show that the role of binding proteins can be more nuanced than previously suspected. In particular, for chromatin polymer in confinement, entropic forces can drive reswelling of collapsed chromatin with increasing binder concentrations, and this reswelling transition happens at physiologically relevant binder concentrations. Both the extent of collapse, and also of reswelling depends on the strength of confinement. We also study the kinetics of collapse and reswelling and show that both processes occur in similar timescales. We characterise this reswelling of chromatin in biologically relevant regimes and discuss the non-trivial role of multivalent binding proteins in mediating the spatial organisation of the genome.
Keyphrases
  • dna damage
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • dna methylation
  • molecular dynamics
  • lymph node