Monday, October 19, 2009

Investigators Reveal Folding Principles of the Human Genome

Filed under: in the news...

Scientists have long been speculating on how DNA gets packaged inside chromosomes while remaining readable and easily accessible. In a paper just published in Science, researchers from Harvard and MIT have discovered that sections of the DNA bunch together into "fractal globule, a knot-free, polymer conformation that enables maximally dense packing while preserving the ability to easily fold and unfold any genomic locus." The image on the side shows the "equilibrium globule" configuration that was thought to be the structure (left) and the actual configuration (right) that was identified by the team.

Key to deciphering the genome's structure was the development of the new Hi-C technique, which permits genome-wide analysis of the proximity of individual genes. The scientists first used formaldehyde to link together DNA strands that are nearby in the cell's nucleus. They then determined the identity of the neighboring segments by shredding the DNA into many tiny pieces, attaching the linked DNA into small loops, and performing massively parallel DNA sequencing.

Lieberman-Aiden observed that the data suggest a fractal globule. He then teamed up with Mirny and Mirny's student Maxim Imakaev to confirm his hypothesis and demonstrate conclusively that the Hi-C data matched fractal globule behavior. Computer simulations further helped to reveal biologically important features of such a DNA architecture.

In future experiments, the researchers hope to follow the development of stem cells into mature cell types such as kidney cells, says Lieberman-Aiden. "We want to understand how that process takes place, because it clearly involves some 3-D remodeling of the nucleus."

Press release: A new dimension for genome studies...

Abstract in Science: Comprehensive Mapping of Long-Range Interactions Reveals Folding Principles of the Human Genome

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The fractal structure of the folding of DNA double helical strand makes a lot of sense, since such folding can result in a "knotless" structure. This is obviously advantageous for the DNA polymerase to crawl along and transcribe the strand without bumping into a knot. Also, fractals provide dense packing.

Most importantly, however, such almost "visible" fractal properties of DNA structure raise awareness that a fractal structure may be coupled with a fractal function of the genome - most especially, since e.g. some brain cell have been shown to grow, governed by nothing but the DNA, into a fractal hierarchy.

Such notions have been around for some time (e.g. Eugene Stanley in the mid-nineties) - but since fractal algorithms are inherently recursive, and Crick's "Central Dogma" prohibited recursion of information from proteins to DNA. After the ENCODE results were revealed (2007), however, both the "Central Dogma" and "Junk DNA" mistaken axioms were dismissed and The Principle of Recursive Genome Function asserted a fractal recursive iteration as a basic tenet of HoloGenome regulation.

Pellionisz_at_junkdna.com


Posted by: Pellionisz
on October 19, 2009 04:41 PM GMT

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