Simulating the Entropic Collapse of Coarse-Grained Chromosomes |
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Authors: | Tyler?N. Shendruk Martin Bertrand Hendrick?W. de?Haan James?L. Harden Gary?W. Slater |
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Affiliation: | 1.The Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, Department of Physics, Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom;2.Department of Physics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;3.Faculty of Science, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | Depletion forces play a role in the compaction and decompaction of chromosomal material in simple cells, but it has remained debatable whether they are sufficient to account for chromosomal collapse. We present coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, which reveal that depletion-induced attraction is sufficient to cause the collapse of a flexible chain of large structural monomers immersed in a bath of smaller depletants. These simulations use an explicit coarse-grained computational model that treats both the supercoiled DNA structural monomers and the smaller protein crowding agents as combinatorial, truncated Lennard-Jones spheres. By presenting a simple theoretical model, we quantitatively cast the action of depletants on supercoiled bacterial DNA as an effective solvent quality. The rapid collapse of the simulated flexible chromosome at the predicted volume fraction of depletants is a continuous phase transition. Additional physical effects to such simple chromosome models, such as enthalpic interactions between structural monomers or chain rigidity, are required if the collapse is to be a first-order phase transition. |
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