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      Non-equilibrium chromosome looping via molecular slip-links

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          Abstract

          We propose a model for the formation of chromatin loops based on the diffusive sliding of a DNA-bound factor which can dimerise to form a molecular slip-link. Our slip-links mimic the behaviour of cohesin-like molecules, which, along with the CTCF protein, stabilize loops which organize the genome. By combining 3D Brownian dynamics simulations and 1D exactly solvable non-equilibrium models, we show that diffusive sliding is sufficient to account for the strong bias in favour of convergent CTCF-mediated chromosome loops observed experimentally. Importantly, our model does not require any underlying, and energetically costly, motor activity of cohesin. We also find that the diffusive motion of multiple slip-links along chromatin may be rectified by an intriguing ratchet effect that arises if slip-links bind to the chromatin at a preferred "loading site". This emergent collective behaviour is driven by a 1D osmotic pressure which is set up near the loading point, and favours the extrusion of loops which are much larger than the ones formed by single slip-links.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2016-12-21
          Article
          1612.07256
          eb31ac17-6638-42d1-a89b-f115da16977e

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          37 pages, 12 figures, Supplementary Movies can be downloaded at http://www2.ph.ed.ac.uk/~dmarendu/Cohesin/SMX.mp4; with X=1, 2 or 3
          physics.bio-ph cond-mat.soft q-bio.BM q-bio.GN

          Condensed matter,Molecular biology,Biophysics,Genetics
          Condensed matter, Molecular biology, Biophysics, Genetics

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