The structural consequences of one-sided loop extrusion

ORAL

Abstract

SMC complexes, such as condensin or cohesin, organize chromatin in various scenarios across many cell types by a process known as loop extrusion. These complexes reel in DNA and extrude it as a loop in a directed and ATP-dependent manner. Recent in vitro experiments show that, in contrast to existing models, loop extrusion is “one-sided” so that SMC complexes reel in and extrude DNA from only one side. We develop theoretical and simulation models to determine whether one-sided extrusion can explain phenomena such as mitotic chromosome compaction, interphase TAD formation, and juxtaposition of bacterial chromosome arms. We find that purely one-sided extrusion cannot explain these phenomena, but simple variants in which extrusion becomes effectively two-sided can rescue chromosome morphology in these scenarios. Our results suggest that there must be factors in vivo that promote two-sided extrusion or other SMC complex cooperativity.

Presenters

  • Edward Banigan

    • Institute of Medical Engineering & Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Institute for Medical Engineering&Science, MIT

Authors

  • Edward Banigan

    • Institute of Medical Engineering & Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Institute for Medical Engineering&Science, MIT
  • Aafke van den Berg

    • Institute of Medical Engineering & Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Hugo B Brandao

    • Program in Biophysics, Harvard University
  • John Frederick Marko

    • Northwestern University
    • Physics and Astronomy, and Molecular Biosciences, Northwestern University
    • Departments of Physics & Astronomy and Molecular Biosciences, Northwestern University
  • Leonid Mirny

    • IMES, MIT
    • Institute of Medical Engineering & Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology