Systematic inference and comparison of multi-scale chromatin sub-compartments connects spatial organization to cell phenotypes.
Yuanlong LiuLuca NanniStephanie SungaleeMarie ZuffereyDaniele TavernariMarco MinaStefano CeriElisa OricchioGiovanni CirielloPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Chromatin compartmentalization reflects biological activity. However, inference of chromatin sub-compartments and compartment domains from chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) experiments is limited by data resolution. As a result, these have been characterized only in a few cell types and systematic comparisons across multiple tissues and conditions are missing. Here, we present Calder, an algorithmic approach that enables the identification of multi-scale sub-compartments at variable data resolution. Calder allows to infer and compare chromatin sub-compartments and compartment domains in >100 cell lines. Our results reveal sub-compartments enriched for poised chromatin states and undergoing spatial repositioning during lineage differentiation and oncogenic transformation.