Issue 42, 2022

Symmetry-based classification of forces driving chromatin dynamics

Abstract

Chromatin – the functional form of DNA in the cell – exists in the form of a polymer immersed in a nucleoplasmic fluid inside the cell nucleus. Both chromatin and nucleoplasm are subject to active forces resulting from local biological processes. This activity leads to non-equilibrium phenomena, affecting chromatin organization and dynamics, yet the underlying physics is far from understood. Here, we expand upon a previously developed two-fluid model of chromatin and nucleoplasm by considering three types of activity in the form of force dipoles – two with both forces of the dipole acting on the same fluid (either polymer or nucleoplasm) and a third, with two forces pushing chromatin and solvent in opposite directions. We find that this latter type results in the most significant flows, dominating over most length scales of interest. Due to the friction between the fluids and their viscosity, we observe emergent screening length scales in the active flows of this system. We predict that the presence of different activity types and their relative strengths can be inferred from observing the power spectra of hydrodynamic fluctuations in the chromatin and the nucleoplasm.

Graphical abstract: Symmetry-based classification of forces driving chromatin dynamics

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Jun 2022
Accepted
21 Sep 2022
First published
14 Oct 2022

Soft Matter, 2022,18, 8134-8146

Author version available

Symmetry-based classification of forces driving chromatin dynamics

I. Eshghi, A. Zidovska and A. Y. Grosberg, Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 8134 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM00840H

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