Chemical-induced phase transition and global conformational reorganization of chromatin

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Abstract

Chemicals or drugs can accumulate within biomolecular condensates formed through phase separation in cells. Here, we use super-resolution imaging to search for chemicals that induce phase transition within chromatin at the microscale. This microscopic screening approach reveals that adriamycin (doxorubicin) — a widely used anticancer drug that is known to interact with chromatin — specifically induces visible local condensation and global conformational change of chromatin in cancer and primary cells. Hi-C and ATAC-seq experiments systematically and quantitatively demonstrate that adriamycin-induced chromatin condensation is accompanied by weakened chromatin interaction within topologically associated domains, compartment A/B switching, lower chromatin accessibility, and corresponding transcriptomic changes. Mechanistically, adriamycin complexes with histone H1 and induces phase transition of H1, forming fibrous aggregates in vitro. These results reveal a phase separation-driven mechanism for a chemotherapeutic drug.

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Wang, T., Shi, S., Shi, Y., Jiang, P., Hu, G., Ye, Q., … Lin, C. P. (2023). Chemical-induced phase transition and global conformational reorganization of chromatin. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41340-4

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