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CONTROL OF THE 4D CHROMATIN LANDSCAPE UNDERLYING GENE ACTIVITY DURING DEVELOPMENT

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RT-CDF: One of the grand challenges of modern biology is to understand how gene activity is controlled in space and time, in the context of native chromosomes and in individual living cells. The goal of this proposal is to tackle exactly this challenge: we will develop new approaches to measure and manipulate long-range chromosomal interactions and quantify their effects on gene expression, in real-time and in living cells and tissues. By quantitatively mapping the relationship between transcription factor assembly (e.g. formation of biomolecular condensates), chromosome organization and transcription kinetics, our study will define how gene expression is controlled at unprecedented resolution. Transcriptional regulation forms the basis of cellular differentiation during organismal development, and its defects underlie a variety of disease states, from developmental disorders to cancer. Yet current methods are limited: traditional live-imaging lacks the spatial resolution to accurately define chromosome organization at the scale of individual genes, while bulk assays using fixed material are ill-suited for studying temporal dynamics. In addition, membrane-less nuclear condensates, which form through liquid-liquid phase separation, are thought to play key but as-yet-undefined roles in regulating transcription. To address these challenges, we will develop new imaging methods to measure chromosomal distances in living cells and build optogenetic tools to assemble/disassemble chromosome loops and nuclear condensates. We will deploy these tools to examine regulatory interactions at genomic scales characteristic of enhancer– promoter interactions in flies and mammals (from tens to hundreds of kilobases), and study their implications in the context of cell fate specification in the developing Drosophila embryo. The resulting technologies will be applied to analogous transcriptional loci in mouse embryonic stem cells and organoids derived from these cells. Together, the proposed studies will help reveal how robust mechanisms of cell type specification emerge from stochastic processes such as transcriptional bursts, fluctuations in the size and stability of biomolecular condensates, and dynamic instability of chromatin architecture. The overall goal of this project is to establish a quantitative link between chromatin architecture and transcriptional activity, which will ultimately allow us to take control of gene activity by re-engineering the transcriptional programs underlying developmental and disease processes.

   December 3rd, 2020 at 12:59am

Details


title 
CONTROL OF THE 4D CHROMATIN LANDSCAPE UNDERLYING GENE ACTIVITY DURING DEVELOPMENT
end_date 
2025-06-30
project 
4DN
center_title 
Gregor
name 
1U01DK127429-01
pi 
no view permissions
pi_name 
Thomas Gregor
start_date 
2020-09-17
url 
https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10129645
viewing_group 
4DN