Genome complexity:4-D DNA neighborhood controls (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Friday, October 06, 2017, 22:04 (2366 days ago) @ David Turell

Studies now are looking at DNA changes with time:

https://phys.org/news/2017-10-human-genome-d.html

"For decades, researchers have suspected that when a human cell responds to a stimulus, DNA elements that lie far apart in the genome quickly find one another, forming loops along the chromosome. By rearranging these DNA elements in space, the cell is able to change which genes are active.


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"To track the folding process over time, the research team began by disrupting cohesin, a ring-shaped protein complex that was located at the boundaries of nearly all known loops. In 2015, the team proposed that cohesin creates DNA loops in the cell nucleus by a process of extrusion.

"'Extrusion works like the strap-length adjustor on a backpack," explained Dr. Erez Lieberman Aiden, director of the Center for Genome Architecture at Baylor College of Medicine and senior author on the new study. "When you feed the strap through either side, it forms a loop. DNA seems to be doing the same thing – except that cohesin rings appear to play the role of the adjustor."

"Aiden said a crucial prediction of the 2015 model is that all the loops should disappear in the absence of cohesin. In the new research, Aiden, Rao and colleagues tested that assumption.

"'We found that when we disrupted cohesin, thousands of loops disappeared," said Rao, a medical student at Stanford University, Hertz Fellow and member of the Aiden lab. "Then, when we put cohesin back, all those loops came back – often in a matter of minutes. This is precisely what you would predict from the extrusion model, and it suggests that the speed at which cohesin moves along DNA is among the fastest for any known human protein."

"But not everything happened as the researchers expected. In some cases, loops did the exact opposite of what the researchers anticipated.

"'As we watched thousands of loops across the genome get weaker, we noticed a funny pattern," said Aiden, also a McNair Scholar, Hertz Fellow and a senior investigator at Rice University's Center for Theoretical Biological Physics. "There were a few odd loops that were actually becoming stronger. Then, as we put cohesin back, most loops recovered fully – but these odd loops again did the opposite – they disappeared!"

"By scrutinizing how the maps changed over time, the team realized that extrusion was not the only mechanism bringing DNA elements together. A second mechanism, called compartmentalization, did not involve cohesin.

"'The second mechanism we observed is quite different from extrusion," explained Rao. "Extrusion tends to bring DNA elements together two at a time, and only if they lie on the same chromosome. This other mechanism can connect big groups of elements to one another, even if they lie on different chromosomes. And it seems to be just as fast as extrusion."

"Broad Institute Director Eric Lander, a study co-author, said, "We're beginning to understand the rules by which DNA elements come together in the nucleus. Now that we can track the elements as they move over time, the underlying mechanisms are starting to become clearer.'"

Comment: The fact that DNA can rearrange itself so quickly to respond as necessary indicates there are chemical controls that are yet to be understood. It looks as if DNA can think, but that is beyond possibility. The complexity of the underlying organization it presents demands that the system is designed. Not by chance.


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