4.8 Article

A Hi-C data-integrated model elucidates E. coli chromosome's multiscale organization at various replication stages

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 3077-3091

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab094

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India [RTI 4007]
  2. Department of Science and Technology (DST) of India [CRG/2019/001219]

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The study combines different replication states of E. coli chromosome structures to form a comprehensive model, which reveals that the chromosome self-organizes into multiple macrodomains within a ring-like architecture.
The chromosome of Escherichia coli is riddled with multi-faceted complexity. The emergence of chromosome conformation capture techniques are providing newer ways to explore chromosome organization. Here we combine a beads-on-a-spring polymer-based framework with recently reported Hi-C data for E. coli chromosome, in rich growth condition, to develop a comprehensive model of its chromosome at 5 kb resolution. The investigation focuses on a range of diverse chromosome architectures of E. coli at various replication states corresponding to a collection of cells, individually present in different stages of cell cycle. The Hi-C data-integrated model captures the self-organization of E. coli chromosome into multiple macrodomains within a ring-like architecture. The model demonstrates that the position of oriC is dependent on architecture and replication state of chromosomes. The distance profiles extracted from the model reconcile fluorescence microscopy and DNA-recombination assay experiments. Investigations into writhe of the chromosome model reveal that it adopts helix-like conformation with no net chirality, earlier hypothesized in experiments. A genome-wide radius of gyration map captures multiple chromosomal interaction domains and identifies the precise locations of rrn operons in the chromosome. We show that a model devoid of Hi-C encoded information would fail to recapitulate most genomic features unique to E. coli.

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