Publication

Cell type-specific 3D-genome organization and transcription regulation in the brain.

current
   August 12th, 2025 at 4:42pm

Overview


Abstract

3D organization of the genome plays a critical role in regulating gene expression. How 3D-genome organization differs among different cell types and relates to cell type-dependent transcriptional regulation remains unclear. Here, we used genome-scale DNA and RNA imaging to investigate 3D-genome organization in transcriptionally distinct cell types in the mouse cerebral cortex. We uncovered a wide spectrum of differences in the nuclear architecture and 3D-genome organization among different cell types, ranging from the size of the cell nucleus to higher-order chromosome structures and radial positioning of chromatin loci within the nucleus. These cell type-dependent variations in nuclear architecture and chromatin organization exhibit strong correlations with both the total transcriptional activity of the cell and transcriptional regulation of cell type-specific marker genes. Moreover, we found that the methylated DNA binding protein MeCP2 promotes active-inactive chromatin segregation and regulates transcription in a nuclear radial position-dependent manner that is highly correlated with its function in modulating active-inactive chromatin compartmentalization.

Authors

Liu S  •  Wang CY  •  Zheng P  •  Jia BB  •  Zemke NR  •  Ren P  •  Park HL  •  Ren B  •  Zhuang X

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/40009678


Journal

Science advances

PMID:40009678

Published

February 28th, 2025