4.8 Article

DNA damage reduces heterogeneity and coherence of chromatin motions br

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2205166119

Keywords

structured illumination; chromatin mobility; heterogeneity; DNA damage; phase separation

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [U01CA214282, P30CA012197]

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Chromatin motions are regulated by and may regulate genome functions, particularly in response to DNA damage. In mammalian cells, there is a high level of spatial heterogeneity in the motions of chromatin microdomains. DNA damage reduces heterogeneity and causes spatially defined shifts in chromatin motions.
Chromatin motions depend on and may regulate genome functions, in particular the DNA damage response. In yeast, DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) globally increase chromatin diffusion, whereas in higher eukaryotes the impact of DSBs on chromatin dynamics is more nuanced. We mapped the motions of chromatin microdomains in mammalian cells using diffractive optics and photoactivatable chromatin probes and found a high level of spatial heterogeneity. DNA damage reduces heterogeneity and imposes spatially defined shifts in motions: Distal to DNA breaks, chromatin motions are globally reduced, whereas chromatin retains higher mobility at break sites. These effects are driven by context-dependent changes in chromatin compaction. Photoactivated lattices of chromatin microdomains are ideal to quantify microscale coupling of chromatin motion. We measured correlation distances up to 2 mu m in the cell nucleus, spanning chromosome territories, and speculate that this correlation distance between chromatin microdomains corresponds to the physical separation of A and B compartments identified in chromosome conformation capture experiments. After DNA damage, chromatin motions become less correlated, a phenomenon driven by phase separation at DSBs. Our data indicate tight spatial control of chromatin motions after genomic insults, which may facilitate repair at the break sites and prevent deleterious contacts of DSBs, thereby reducing the risk of genomic rearrangements.

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