Dynamic nuclear structure emerges from chromatin crosslinks and motors

ORAL

Abstract

The cell nucleus houses the chromosomes, which are linked to a soft shell of lamin filaments. Experiments indicate that correlated chromosome dynamics and nuclear shape fluctuations arise from motor activity. To identify the physical mechanisms, we develop a model of an active, crosslinked Rouse chain bound to a polymeric shell. System-sized correlated motions occur but require both motor activity and crosslinks. Contractile motors, in particular, enhance chromosome dynamics by driving anomalous density fluctuations. Nuclear shape fluctuations depend on motor strength, crosslinking, and chromosome-lamina binding. Therefore, complex chromatin dynamics and nuclear shape emerge from a minimal, active chromosome-lamina system.

*NSF-DMR-1832002, CUSE grant, NIH Center for 3D Structure and Physics of the Genome of the 4DN Consortium (U54DK107980), the NIH Physical Sciences-Oncology Center (U54CA193419), and NIH grant GM114190.

Presenters

  • Kuang Liu

    • City College of New York

Authors

  • Kuang Liu

    • City College of New York
  • Alison Patteson

    • Physics, Syracuse University
    • Physics Department and BioInspired Institute, Syracuse University
    • Syracuse University
  • Edward J Banigan

    • MIT
  • J M Schwarz

    • Syracuse University
    • Physics, Syracuse University