Publications by authors named "Philipp M Diesinger"

Although cortical actin plays an important role in cellular mechanics and morphogenesis, there is surprisingly little information on cortex organization at the apical surface of cells. In this paper, we characterize organization and dynamics of microvilli (MV) and a previously unappreciated actomyosin network at the apical surface of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. In contrast to short and static MV in confluent cells, the apical surfaces of nonconfluent epithelial cells (ECs) form highly dynamic protrusions, which are often oriented along the plane of the membrane.

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The packing of eukaryotic DNA in the nucleus is decisive for its function; for instance, contact between remote genome sites constitutes a basic feature of gene regulation. Interactions among regulatory proteins, DNA binding, and transcription activation are facilitated by looping of the intervening chromatin. Such long-range interactions depend on the bending flexibility of chromatin, i.

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A long controversy exists about the structure of chromatin. Theoretically, this structure could be resolved by scattering experiments if one determines the scattering function - or equivalently the pair distribution function - of the nucleosomes. Unfortunately, scattering experiments with live cells are very difficult and limited to only a couple of nucleosomes.

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We present a Monte Carlo model for genome folding at the 30-nm scale with focus on linker-histone and nucleosome depletion effects. We find that parameter distributions from experimental data do not lead to one specific chromatin fiber structure, but instead to a distribution of structures in the chromatin phase diagram. Depletion of linker histones and nucleosomes affects, massively, the flexibility and the extension of chromatin fibers.

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In this work we address the question of whether hydrophobic parts of FG-rich nucleoporins can be the reason for their ability to form a hydro-gel (Frey et al. in Science 314:3, 2006). We focus on the N-terminal fsFG domain of the essential yeast nucleoporin Nsp1p (Hurt in EMBO J 7:4323, 1988) as a nucleoporin model system and on the question of whether a phase transition between a sol and a gel phase exists.

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We present a model improving the two-angle model for interphase chromatin (E2A model). This model takes into account the cylindrical shape of the histone octamers, the H1 histones in front of the nucleosomes, and the distance d between the in and outgoing DNA strands orthogonal to the axis of the corresponding nucleosome cylinder. Factoring these chromatin features in, one gets essential changes in the chromatin phase diagram: Not only the shape of the excluded-volume borderline changes but also the orthogonal distance d has a dramatic influence on the forbidden area.

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Two-angle model and phase diagram for chromatin.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

September 2006

We have studied the phase diagram for chromatin within the framework of the two-angle model. Only a rough estimation of the forbidden surface of the phase diagram for chromatin was given in a previous work of Schiessel. We revealed the fine structure of this excluded-volume borderline numerically and analytically.

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