Connecting Chromatin Structures to Gene Regulation Using Dynamic Polymer Simulations

Author:

Fu Yi1,Clark Finnegan1,Nomikou Sofia2,Tsirigos Aristotelis345,Lionnet Timothee167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Systems Genetics, New York University School of Medicine

2. Arima Genomics, Inc.

3. Department of Pathology, NYU School of Medicine

4. Department of Medicine, Division of Precision Medicine, NYU School of Medicine

5. Applied Bioinformatics Laboratories, NYU School of Medicine

6. Department of Cell Biology, New York University School of Medicine

7. Department of Biomedical Engineering, NYU Tandon School of Engineering

Abstract

The transfer of regulatory information between distal loci on chromatin is thought to involve physical proximity, but key biophysical features of these contacts remain unclear. For instance, it is unknown how close and for how long two loci need to be in order to productively interact. The main challenge is that it is currently impossible to measure chromatin dynamics with high spatiotemporal resolution at scale. Polymer simulations provide an accessible and rigorous way to test biophysical models of chromatin regulation, yet there is a lack of simple and general methods for extracting the values of model parameters. Here we adapt the Nelder-Mead simplex optimization algorithm to select the best polymer model matching a given Hi-C dataset, using the MYC locus as an example. The model’s biophysical parameters predict a compartmental rearrangement of the MYC locus in leukemia, which we validate with single-cell measurements. Leveraging trajectories predicted by the model, we find that loci with similar Hi-C contact frequencies can exhibit widely different contact dynamics. Interestingly, the frequency of productive interactions between loci exhibits a non-linear relationship with their Hi-C contact frequency when we enforce a specific capture radius and contact duration. These observations are consistent with recent experimental observations and suggest that the dynamic ensemble of chromatin configurations, rather than average contact matrices, is required to fully predict long-range chromatin interactions.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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