Author:
Nir Guy,Farabella Irene,Estrada Cynthia Pérez,Ebeling Carl G.,Beliveau Brian J.,Sasaki Hiroshi M.,Lee Soun H.,Nguyen Son C.,McCole Ruth B.,Chattoraj Shyamtanu,Erceg Jelena,Abed Jumana AlHaj,Martins Nuno M. C.,Nguyen Huy Q.,Hannan Mohammed A.,Russell Sheikh,Durand Neva C.,Rao Suhas S.P.,Kishi Jocelyn Y.,Soler-Vila Paula,Di Pierro Michele,Onuchic José N.,Callahan Steven,Schreiner John,Stuckey Jeff,Yin Peng,Aiden Erez Lieberman,Marti-Renom Marc A.,Wu C.-ting
Abstract
AbstractChromosome structure is thought to be crucial for proper functioning of the nucleus. Here, we present a method for visualizing chromosomal DNA at super-resolution and then integrating Hi-C data to produce three-dimensional models of chromosome organization. We begin by applying Oligopaint probes and the single-molecule localization microscopy methods of OligoSTORM and OligoDNA-PAINT to image 8 megabases of human chromosome 19, discovering that chromosomal regions contributing to compartments can form distinct structures. Intriguingly, our data also suggest that homologous maternal and paternal regions may be differentially organized. Finally, we integrate imaging data with Hi-C and restraint-based modeling using a method called integrative modeling of genomic regions (IMGR) to increase the genomic resolution of our traces to 10 kb.One Sentence SummarySuper-resolution genome tracing, contact maps, and integrative modeling enable 10 kb resolution glimpses of chromosome folding.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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