Abstract
AbstractChromosomes are segmented into domains and compartments; yet, how these structures are spatially related in 3D is unclear. Here, by directly integrating Hi-C capture experiments and 3D modeling, we use X-inactivation as a model to examine the time evolution of 3D chromosome architecture during substantial changes in gene expression. First, we show that gene expression A/B compartments are consistent with phase separation in 3D space. Second, we show that residuals of smaller scale structures persist through transitions, despite further large-scale reorganization into the final inactive configuration, comprising two “megadomains”. Interestingly, these previously hidden residual structures were not detectable in 2D Hi-C maps or principal component analyses. Third, time-dependent reaction-diffusion simulations reveal how Xist RNA particles diffuse across the 3D X-superstructure as it reorganizes. Our 4DHiC pipeline helps satisfy the growing demand for methodologies that produce 3D chromosome reconstructions directly from 2D datasets, which are consistent with the empirical data.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory