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Live-cell magnetic micromanipulation of a genomic locus reveals interphase chromatin mechanics

ORAL

Abstract

Our understanding of the physical principles organizing the genome in the nucleus is limited by the lack of tools to directly exert and measure forces on interphase chromosomes in vivo and probe their material nature. Here, we introduce an approach to actively manipulate a genomic locus using controlled magnetic forces inside the nucleus of a living human cell. We observed viscoelastic displacements over micrometers within minutes in response to near-piconewton forces, which are consistent with a Rouse polymer model. Our results highlight the fluidity of chromatin, with a moderate contribution of the surrounding material, revealing minor roles for cross-links and topological effects and challenging the view that interphase chromatin is a gel-like material. Our technology opens avenues for future research in areas from chromosome mechanics to genome functions.

Publication: Keizer et al., Science 377, 489–495 (2022)

Presenters

  • Simon B Grosse-Holz

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Simon B Grosse-Holz

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Veer Keizer

    National Cancer Institute, NIH

  • Maxime Woringer

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Vittore Scolari

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Edward J Banigan

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics and Institute of Medical Engineering and Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA 02139

  • Leonid A Mirny

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Laura Zambon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR, ESPCI Paris

  • Daniele Fachinetti

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR

  • Antoine Coulon

    Institut Curie, Paris, FR