Publication

Visualizing DNA folding and RNA in embryos at single-cell resolution.

current
   May 20th, 2022 at 8:49am

Overview


Abstract

The establishment of cell types during development requires precise interactions between genes and distal regulatory sequences. We have a limited understanding of how these interactions look in three dimensions, vary across cell types in complex tissue, and relate to transcription. Here we describe optical reconstruction of chromatin architecture (ORCA), a method that can trace the DNA path in single cells with nanoscale accuracy and genomic resolution reaching two kilobases. We used ORCA to study a Hox gene cluster in cryosectioned Drosophila embryos and labelled around 30 RNA species in parallel. We identified cell-type-specific physical borders between active and Polycomb-repressed DNA, and unexpected Polycomb-independent borders. Deletion of Polycomb-independent borders led to ectopic enhancer-promoter contacts, aberrant gene expression, and developmental defects. Together, these results illustrate an approach for high-resolution, single-cell DNA domain analysis in vivo, identify domain structures that change with cell identity, and show that border elements contribute to the formation of physical domains in Drosophila.

Authors

Mateo LJ  •  Murphy SE  •  Hafner A  •  Cinquini IS  •  Walker CA  •  Boettiger AN

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30886393


Journal

Nature

PMID:30886393

Published

April 2019