How enzymatic activity is involved in chromatin organization

Elife. 2022 Dec 6:11:e79901. doi: 10.7554/eLife.79901.

Abstract

Spatial organization of chromatin plays a critical role in genome regulation. Previously, various types of affinity mediators and enzymes have been attributed to regulate spatial organization of chromatin from a thermodynamics perspective. However, at the mechanistic level, enzymes act in their unique ways and perturb the chromatin. Here, we construct a polymer physics model following the mechanistic scheme of Topoisomerase-II, an enzyme resolving topological constraints of chromatin, and investigate how it affects interphase chromatin organization. Our computer simulations demonstrate Topoisomerase-II's ability to phase separate chromatin into eu- and heterochromatic regions with a characteristic wall-like organization of the euchromatic regions. We realized that the ability of the euchromatic regions to cross each other due to enzymatic activity of Topoisomerase-II induces this phase separation. This realization is based on the physical fact that partial absence of self-avoiding interaction can induce phase separation of a system into its self-avoiding and non-self-avoiding parts, which we reveal using a mean-field argument. Furthermore, motivated from recent experimental observations, we extend our model to a bidisperse setting and show that the characteristic features of the enzymatic activity-driven phase separation survive there. The existence of these robust characteristic features, even under the non-localized action of the enzyme, highlights the critical role of enzymatic activity in chromatin organization.

Keywords: chromatin organization; enzymatic activity; none; physics of living systems; polymer physics; topoisomerase.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Chromatin*
  • DNA Topoisomerases, Type II / genetics
  • Genome*
  • Interphase
  • Polymers

Substances

  • Chromatin
  • DNA Topoisomerases, Type II
  • Polymers

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.