The physics of epigenetics
Ruggero Cortini, Maria Barbi, Bertrand R. Car\'e, Christophe Lavelle,, Annick Lesne, Julien Mozziconacci, Jean-Marc Victor

TL;DR
This paper explores the physical principles underlying epigenetic mechanisms, highlighting how physics governs gene regulation, inheritance, and the stability of cell states through multi-scale processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of the physical mechanisms involved in epigenetics, integrating concepts from polymer physics, non-equilibrium systems, and electrostatics.
Findings
Physical principles underpin epigenetic stability and inheritance.
Polymer behavior influences genome organization.
Non-equilibrium dynamics shape epigenetic states.
Abstract
In higher organisms, all cells share the same genome, but every cell expresses only a limited and specific set of genes that defines the cell type. During cell division, not only the genome, but also the cell type is inherited by the daughter cells. This intriguing phenomenon is achieved by a variety of processes that have been collectively termed epigenetics: the stable and inheritable changes in gene expression patterns. This article reviews the extremely rich and exquisitely multi-scale physical mechanisms that govern the biological processes behind the initiation, spreading and inheritance of epigenetic states. These include not only the changes in the molecular properties associated with the chemical modifications of DNA and histone proteins, such as methylation and acetylation, but also less conventional ones, such as the physics that governs the three-dimensional organization of…
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