Motivated by the problem of domain formation in chromosomes, we studied a co-polymer model where only a subset of the monomers feel attractive interactions. These monomers are displaced randomly from a regularly-spaced pattern, thus introducing some quenched disorder in the system. Previous work has shown that in the case of regularly-spaced interacting monomers this chain can fold into structures characterized by multiple distinct domains of consecutive segments. In each domain, attractive interactions are balanced by the entropy cost of forming loops. We show by advanced replica-exchange simulations that adding disorder in the position of the interacting monomers further stabilizes these domains. The model suggests that the partitioning of the chain into well-defined domains of consecutive monomers is a spontaneous property of heteropolymers. In the case of chromosomes, evolution could have acted on the spacing of interacting monomers to modulate in a simple way the underlying domains for functional reasons.

Spontaneous domain formation in disordered copolymers as a mechanism for chromosome structuring / M. Negri, M. Gherardi, G. Tiana, M. Cosentino Lagomarsino. - In: SOFT MATTER. - ISSN 1744-683X. - 14:29(2018 Jul 25), pp. 6128-6136. [10.1039/c8sm00468d]

Spontaneous domain formation in disordered copolymers as a mechanism for chromosome structuring

M. Gherardi
Secondo
;
G. Tiana;M. Cosentino Lagomarsino
2018

Abstract

Motivated by the problem of domain formation in chromosomes, we studied a co-polymer model where only a subset of the monomers feel attractive interactions. These monomers are displaced randomly from a regularly-spaced pattern, thus introducing some quenched disorder in the system. Previous work has shown that in the case of regularly-spaced interacting monomers this chain can fold into structures characterized by multiple distinct domains of consecutive segments. In each domain, attractive interactions are balanced by the entropy cost of forming loops. We show by advanced replica-exchange simulations that adding disorder in the position of the interacting monomers further stabilizes these domains. The model suggests that the partitioning of the chain into well-defined domains of consecutive monomers is a spontaneous property of heteropolymers. In the case of chromosomes, evolution could have acted on the spacing of interacting monomers to modulate in a simple way the underlying domains for functional reasons.
Settore FIS/03 - Fisica della Materia
Settore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica, Modelli e Metodi Matematici
25-lug-2018
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/583455
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