Nonequilibrium dynamics and action at a distance in transcriptionally driven DNA supercoiling

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Abstract

We study the effect of transcription on the kinetics of DNA supercoiling in three dimensions by means of Brownian dynamics simulations of a single-nucleotide–resolution coarse-grained model for double-stranded DNA. By explicitly accounting for the action of a transcribing RNA polymerase (RNAP), we characterize the geometry and nonequilibrium dynamics of the ensuing twin supercoiling domains. Contrary to the typical textbook picture, we find that the generation of twist by RNAP results in the formation of plectonemes (writhed DNA) some distance away. We further demonstrate that this translates into an “action at a distance” on DNA-binding proteins; for instance, positive supercoils downstream of an elongating RNAP destabilize nucleosomes long before the transcriptional machinery reaches the histone octamer. We also analyze the relaxation dynamics of supercoiled double-stranded DNA, and characterize the widely different timescales of twist diffusion, which is a simple and fast process, and writhe relaxation, which is much slower and entails multiple steps.

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Fosado, Y. A. G., Michieletto, D., Brackley, C. A., & Marenduzzo, D. (2021). Nonequilibrium dynamics and action at a distance in transcriptionally driven DNA supercoiling. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(10). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1905215118

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