Hierarchical Prediction and Perturbation of Chromatin Organization Reveal How Loop Domains Mediate Higher-Order Architectures.

Journal: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany)
Published Date:

Abstract

The genome is folded within the dense cell nucleus in a hierarchical manner, resulting in complex interactions between distinct folding strategies at various length scales. To elucidate how short-range loop domains regulate higher-order structures of the chromatin, such as topologically associating domains (TADs) and compartments, HiCGen is introduced as a hierarchical and cell-type-specific generator based on Swin-transformer architecture. HiCGen predicts genome organization across different spatial scales utilizing DNA sequence and genomic features as inputs. The model enables in silico screening through genetic or epigenetic perturbations on genome architecture, with resolution down to 1 kb. The analysis reveals unexpected linear correlations between loop properties and genome organization at various levels, including insulation degree, compartmentalization, and contact intensity over genomic distances exceeding 10 Mb. Regional or global perturbation conducted by HiCGen provides biological implications for such cross-scale correlations and their genome-function dependence. Notably, perturbation analysis of the human genome in sigmoid colon tissue demonstrates that modest activation of carcinogenesis-associated enhancers is sufficient to hijack nearby promoter, reshape TAD boundaries, and even flip compartment at mega-base scale.

Authors

  • Jiachen Wei
    Changping Laboratory, Beijing, 102206, China.
  • Yue Xue
    Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China.
  • Yi Qin Gao
    Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, China.

Keywords

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