WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) -- Scientists have
deciphered the three-dimensional structure of the human genome, paving the way
for new insights into genomic function and expanding our understanding of how
cellular DNA folds at scales that dwarf the double helix.
In a paper featured this week on the cover of the
journal Science, they describe a new technology called Hi-C and apply it to
answer the thorny question of how each of our cells stows some three billion
base pairs of DNA while maintaining access to functionally crucial segments. The
paper comes from a team led by scientists at Harvard University, the Broad
Institute of Harvard and MIT, University of Massachusetts (UMass) Medical
School, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"We've long known that on a small scale, DNA is a
double helix," says co-first author Erez Lieberman-Aiden, a graduate student in
the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Science and Technology. "But if the double
helix didn't fold further, the genome in each cell would be two meters long.
Scientists have not really understood how the double helix folds to fit into the
nucleus of a human cell, which is only about a hundredth of a millimeter in
diameter. This new approach enabled us to probe exactly that question."
The researchers report two striking findings. First,
the human genome is organized into two separate compartments, keeping active
genes separate and accessible while sequestering unused DNA in a denser storage
compartment. Chromosomes snake in and out of the two compartments repeatedly as
their DNA alternates between active, gene-rich and inactive, gene-poor
stretches.
"Cells cleverly separate the most active genes into
their own special neighborhood, to make it easier for proteins and other
regulators to reach them," says Job Dekker, associate professor of biochemistry
and molecular pharmacology at UMass Medical School and a senior author of the
Science paper.
Second, at a finer scale, the genome adopts an
unusual organization known in mathematics as a "fractal." The specific
architecture the scientists found, called a "fractal globule," enables the cell
to pack DNA incredibly tightly -- the information density in the nucleus is
trillions of times higher than on a computer chip -- while avoiding the knots
and tangles that might interfere with the cell's ability to read its own genome.
Moreover, the DNA can easily unfold and refold during gene activation, gene
repression, and cell replication.
"Nature's devised a stunningly elegant solution to
storing information -- a super-dense, knot-free structure," says senior author
Eric Lander, director of the Broad Institute, who is also professor of biology
at MIT, and professor of systems biology at Harvard Medical School.
In the past, many scientists had thought that DNA was
compressed into a different architecture called an "equilibrium globule," a
configuration that is problematic because it can become densely knotted. The
fractal globule architecture, while proposed as a theoretical possibility more
than 20 years ago, has never previously been observed.
Key to the current work was the development of the
new Hi-C technique, which permits genome-wide analysis of the proximity of
individual genes. The scientists first used formaldehyde to link together DNA
strands that are nearby in the cell's nucleus. They then determined the identity
of the neighboring segments by shredding the DNA into many tiny pieces,
attaching the linked DNA into small loops, and performing massively parallel DNA
sequencing.
"By breaking the genome into millions of pieces, we
created a spatial map showing how close different parts are to one another,"
says co-first author Nynke van Berkum, a postdoctoral researcher at UMass
Medical School in Dekker's laboratory. "We made a fantastic three-dimensional
jigsaw puzzle and then, with a computer, solved the puzzle."