A Molecular View
into the Structure and Dynamics of
Phase-Separated Chromatin
Posted on 2024-10-16 - 21:22
The organization
of chromatin is critical for gene expression,
yet the underlying mechanisms responsible for this organization remain
unclear. Recent work has suggested that phase separation might play
an important role in chromatin organization, yet the molecular forces
that drive chromatin phase separation are poorly understood. In this
work we interrogate a molecular model of chromatin to quantify the
driving forces and thermodynamics of chromatin phase separation. By
leveraging a multiscale approach, our molecular model is able to reproduce
chromatin’s chemical and structural details at the level of
a few nanometers, yet remain efficient enough to simulate chromatin
phase separation across 100 nm length scales. We first demonstrate
that our model can reproduce key experiments of phase separating nucleosomal
arrays, and then apply our model to quantify the interactions that
drive their formation into chromatin condensates with either liquid-
or solid-like material properties. We next use our model to characterize
the molecular structure within chromatin condensates and find that
this structure is irregularly ordered and is inconsistent with existing
30 nm fiber models. Lastly we examine how post-translational modifications
can modulate chromatin phase separation and how the acetylation of
chromatin can lead to chromatin decompaction while still preserving
phase separation. Taken together, our work provides a molecular view
into the structure and dynamics of phase-separated chromatin and provides
new insights into how phase separation might manifest in the nucleus
of living cells.
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Golembeski, Andrew; Lequieu, Joshua (2024). A Molecular View
into the Structure and Dynamics of
Phase-Separated Chromatin. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c04420