The Influence of Spatial Variation in Chromatin Density Determined by X-ray Tomograms on the Time to Find DNA Binding Sites
Samuel A. Isaacson, Carolyn A. Larabell, Mark A. Le Gros, David M., McQueen, and Charles S. Peskin

TL;DR
This study investigates how spatial variations in chromatin density affect the time proteins take to find DNA binding sites, revealing an optimal volume exclusion level that minimizes search time in euchromatin regions.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking chromatin density variation to protein search times, identifying an optimal volume exclusivity for efficient DNA binding.
Findings
Mean search time minimized at finite volume exclusivity for euchromatin sites.
Search time minimized at zero volume exclusivity for heterochromatin sites.
Analytical theory explains the balance between search space reduction and potential barriers.
Abstract
In this work we examine how volume exclusion caused by regions of high chromatin density might influence the time required for proteins to find specific DNA binding sites. The spatial variation of chromatin density within mouse olfactory sensory neurons is determined from soft X-ray tomography reconstructions of five nuclei. We show that there is a division of the nuclear space into regions of low-density euchromatin and high-density heterochromatin. Volume exclusion experienced by a diffusing protein caused by this varying density of chromatin is modeled by a repulsive potential. The value of the potential at a given point in space is chosen to be proportional to the density of chromatin at that location. The constant of proportionality, called the volume exclusivity, provides a model parameter that determines the strength of volume exclusion. Numerical simulations demonstrate that the…
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