info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Microscopy-based chromosome conformation capture enables simultaneous visualization of genome organization and transcription in intact organisms
Fecha
2019-04Registro en:
Cardozo Gizzi, Andres Mauricio; Cattoni, Diego Ignacio; Fiche, Jean-Bernard; Espínola, Sergio Martín; Gurgo, Julián Roberto; et al.; Microscopy-based chromosome conformation capture enables simultaneous visualization of genome organization and transcription in intact organisms; Cell Press; Molecular Cell; 74; 1; 4-2019; 212-222.e5
1097-2765
1097-4164
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Cardozo Gizzi, Andres Mauricio
Cattoni, Diego Ignacio
Fiche, Jean-Bernard
Espínola, Sergio Martín
Gurgo, Julián Roberto
Messina, Olivier
Houbron, Christophe
Ogiyama, Yuki
Papadopoulos, Giorgio L.
Cavalli, Giacomo
Lagha, Mounia
Nollmann, Marcelo
Resumen
Eukaryotic chromosomes are organized in multiple scales, from nucleosomes to chromosome territories. Recently, genome-wide methods identified an intermediate level of chromosome organization, topologically associating domains (TADs), that play key roles in transcriptional regulation. However, these methods cannot directly examine the interplay between transcriptional activation and chromosome architecture while maintaining spatial information. Here we present a multiplexed, sequential imaging approach (Hi-M) that permits simultaneous detection of chromosome organization and transcription in single nuclei. This allowed us to unveil the changes in 3D chromatin organization occurring upon transcriptional activation and homologous chromosome unpairing during awakening of the zygotic genome in intact Drosophila embryos. Excitingly, the ability of Hi-M to explore the multi-scale chromosome architecture with spatial resolution at different stages of development or during the cell cycle will be key to understanding the mechanisms and consequences of the 4D organization of the genome. Cardozo Gizzi et al. developed Hi-M, a multiplexed imaging-based approach to detect 3D chromatin folding in single cells within intact Drosophila embryos. The ability of Hi-M to detect the spatial organization of cells enabled measurement of changes in TAD organization during early embryogenesis and upon transcriptional activation.