Understanding how chromatin folding and enzyme competition affect rugged epigenetic landscapes
Epigenetics plays a key role in cellular differentiation and maintaining cell identity, enabling cells to regulate their genetic activity without altering the DNA sequence. Epigenetic regulation occurs within the context of hierarchically folded chromatin, yet the interplay between the dynamics of e...
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Zusammenfassung: | Epigenetics plays a key role in cellular differentiation and maintaining cell
identity, enabling cells to regulate their genetic activity without altering
the DNA sequence. Epigenetic regulation occurs within the context of
hierarchically folded chromatin, yet the interplay between the dynamics of
epigenetic modifications and chromatin architecture remains poorly understood.
In addition, it remains unclear what mechanisms drive the formation of rugged
epigenetic patterns, characterised by alternating genomic regions enriched in
activating and repressive marks. In this study, we focus on post-translational
modifications of histone H3 tails, particularly H3K27me3, H3K4me3, and H3K27ac.
We introduce a mesoscopic stochastic model that incorporates chromatin
architecture and competition of histone-modifying enzymes into the dynamics of
epigenetic modifications in small genomic loci comprising several nucleosomes.
Our approach enables us to investigate the mechanisms by which epigenetic
patterns form on larger scales of chromatin organisation, such as loops and
domains. Through bifurcation analysis and stochastic simulations, we
demonstrate that the model can reproduce uniform chromatin states (open,
closed, and bivalent) and generate previously unexplored rugged profiles. Our
results suggest that enzyme competition and chromatin conformations with
high-frequency interactions between distant genomic loci can drive the
emergence of rugged epigenetic landscapes. Additionally, we hypothesise that
bivalent chromatin can act as an intermediate state, facilitating transitions
between uniform and rugged landscapes. This work offers a powerful mathematical
framework for understanding the dynamic interactions between chromatin
architecture and epigenetic regulation, providing new insights into the
formation of complex epigenetic patterns. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.06116 |