Organisation and dynamics of individual DNA segments in topologically complex genomes
Organisation and dynamics of individual DNA segments in topologically complex genomes
Capturing the physical organisation and dynamics of genomic regions is one of the major open challenges in biology. The kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) is a topologically complex genome, made by thousands of DNA (mini and maxi) circles interlinked into a two-dimensional Olympic network. The organisation and dynamics of these DNA circles are poorly understood. In this paper, we show that dCas9 linked to Quantum Dots can efficiently label different classes of DNA minicircles in kDNA. We use this method to study the distribution and dynamics of different classes of DNA minicircles within the network. We discover that maxicircles display a preference to localise at the periphery of the network and that they undergo subdiffusive dynamics. From the latter, we can also quantify the effective network stiffness, confirming previous indirect estimations via AFM. Our method could be used more generally, to quantify the location, dynamics and material properties of genomic regions in other complex genomes, such as that of bacteria, and to study their behaviour in the presence of DNA-binding proteins.
Saminathan Ramakrishnan、Auro Varat Patnaik、Guglielmo Grillo、Luca Tubiana、Davide Michieletto
分子生物学生物物理学
Saminathan Ramakrishnan,Auro Varat Patnaik,Guglielmo Grillo,Luca Tubiana,Davide Michieletto.Organisation and dynamics of individual DNA segments in topologically complex genomes[EB/OL].(2025-04-15)[2025-04-28].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.11340.点此复制
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