Understanding Large-Scale Nuclear Architecture by Gautam Menon

Understanding Large-Scale Nuclear Architecture by Gautam Menon

International Centre for Theoretical Sciences via YouTube Direct link

Gautama Menon Ashoka University/IMSc, India 04:30 pm, 18 JANUARY 2021

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Gautama Menon Ashoka University/IMSc, India 04:30 pm, 18 JANUARY 2021

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Understanding Large-Scale Nuclear Architecture by Gautam Menon

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  1. 1 Gautama Menon Ashoka University/IMSc, India 04:30 pm, 18 JANUARY 2021
  2. 2 Biophysics Computational Biology Infectious diseases
  3. 3 Can one bring to biological modelling the rigor of models in physics?
  4. 4 Can one bring to biological modelling the rigor and precision of models in physics?
  5. 5 What would we call progress in the quantitative model understanding of specific systems in biology?
  6. 6 All of us work with mental models
  7. 7 Leave out detail, capture essential features as the ultimate goal .... but what details?
  8. 8 The question I've been interested in
  9. 9 Metazoans
  10. 10 A single cell
  11. 11 What makes a simple polymer different from DNA in the nucleus of a living cell?
  12. 12 Term "chromatin" coined in 1882 by Walther Flemming to
  13. 13 Talk about chromatin when we discuss the
  14. 14 "During the 1970s and 1980s, most researchers seemed content with the assumption that
  15. 15 What we know now
  16. 16 Chromosomes are not mixed at random but are found in well-defined territories
  17. 17 How do we know this? Chromosome painting
  18. 18 Tightly packed DNA, gene-poor
  19. 19 What makes a simple polymer different from DNA in the nucleus of a living cell?
  20. 20 The biophysical context
  21. 21 What does it mean to say something is not in thermal equilibrium? Currents flow through
  22. 22 Drive a system out of equilibrium by adding energy on a
  23. 23 ATP hydrolysis
  24. 24 1. Chromosomes are territorial
  25. 25 Quantifying non-random arrangements?
  26. 26 Challenge Predict these
  27. 27 "Stylised facts"
  28. 28 SR = 4TR2 PIR
  29. 29 Hypothesis
  30. 30 Chromatin in living cells has many energy consuming
  31. 31 More active regions: Chromatin should see larger mechanical forces
  32. 32 Different gene densities in
  33. 33 More active: Larger fluctuations.
  34. 34 Simplest model
  35. 35 Simulate individual chromosomes within a nucleus
  36. 36 Gene-poor, less active chromatin heterochromatin
  37. 37 Experimental data
  38. 38 Theoretical Predictions
  39. 39 Chromosome Territories: Rabl 1885, Boveri 1908, Stack 1977
  40. 40 Simulations starting from many different initial conditions.
  41. 41 Centre of Mass Distribution
  42. 42 Also agree with our broad understanding from lots of different measurements, which is encouraging
  43. 43 Simplest model surprisingly
  44. 44 GM12878
  45. 45 SOM R
  46. 46 Euchromatin & Heterochromatin
  47. 47 DNA density distribution: 12/20
  48. 48 Configurations: Chromosomes 18 and 19 2 homologs each
  49. 49 Are chromosomes distributed by their gene density or by their size?
  50. 50 Chromosome size
  51. 51 Chromosome gene density
  52. 52 GM12878 Insitu
  53. 53 GM12878 TCC
  54. 54 The fractional volume occupied by each chromosome, as a function of its length
  55. 55 Inactive X chromosome located more peripherally than the active X
  56. 56 Xa/Xi differential localizations
  57. 57 A first-principles model
  58. 58 Nucleolus formation Nuclear phase separation
  59. 59 Collaborators
  60. 60 Thank you

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