Publications by authors named "Sachiko Tamura"

Genomic information must be faithfully transmitted into two daughter cells during mitosis. To ensure the transmission process, interphase chromatin is further condensed into mitotic chromosomes. Although protein factors like condensins and topoisomerase IIα are involved in the assembly of mitotic chromosomes, the physical bases of the condensation process remain unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • Accurate mitotic cell division requires the assembly of replicated chromatin into chromosomes, with proteins like condensin playing crucial roles in this process.
  • Researchers used advanced techniques to study how nucleosomes behave during mitosis in living human cells, discovering that their motion becomes more constrained as chromosomes form.
  • Condensins not only help organize the chromosomes by acting as molecular crosslinkers but also interact with nucleosomes via histone tails, leading to further compaction of entire chromosomes.
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Since Robert Feulgen first stained DNA in the cell, visualizing genome chromatin has been a central issue in cell biology to uncover how chromatin is organized and behaves in the cell. To approach this issue, we have developed single-molecule imaging of nucleosomes, a basic unit of chromatin, to unveil local nucleosome behavior in living cells. In this study, we investigated behaviors of nucleosomes with various histone H4 mutants in living HeLa cells to address the role of H4 tail acetylation, including H4K16Ac and others, which are generally associated with more transcriptionally active chromatin regions.

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  • Higher eukaryotic cells have nucleosomes that wrap DNA and are arranged in condensed chromatin domains, showing liquid-like behavior within these regions, which can be affected by DNA activities like transcription and repair.
  • The study focused on oncogenic HRAS-transformed mouse fibroblast cells (CIRAS-3) compared to their non-cancerous parental cells (10T1/2), revealing changes in chromosome structure and nuclear shape due to transformation.
  • Live imaging showed that CIRAS-3 cells exhibit more constrained nucleosomes and increased heterochromatin associated with higher rates of metastasis, highlighting the role of chromatin structure in cancer cell behavior and emphasizing the potential of single-nucleosome imaging for studying chromatin dynamics
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Genomic information must be faithfully transmitted into two daughter cells during mitosis. To ensure the transmission process, interphase chromatin is further condensed into mitotic chromosomes. Although protein factors like condensins and topoisomerase IIα are involved in the assembly of mitotic chromosomes, the physical bases of the condensation process remain unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • Genomic DNA wraps around histone octamers to form nucleosomes, which are organized into chromatin domains that serve as functional units of the genome.
  • Chromatin is traditionally classified as either euchromatin (open and accessible) or heterochromatin (closed and compact), but recent studies suggest this is an oversimplification.
  • New evidence shows that euchromatin actually features condensed, liquid-like structures, indicating that a denser chromatin state may be the norm in higher eukaryotic cells and affecting overall genome function.
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  • Eukaryotic chromatin organization is complex and regulates various cellular functions, but its physical structure in living cells is not fully understood.
  • Researchers used innovative techniques like genomics and single-nucleosome imaging to study early DNA replication areas in human cells, discovering that nucleosomes form compact domains about 150-nm wide.
  • The study found that on a small scale, nucleosomes act like a liquid within these domains, enhancing chromatin accessibility, while on a larger scale, they behave more solid-like, which helps maintain genome integrity.
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Eukaryotic genome DNA is wrapped around core histones and forms a nucleosome structure. Together with associated proteins and RNAs, these nucleosomes are organized three-dimensionally in the cell as chromatin. Emerging evidence demonstrates that chromatin consists of rather irregular and variable nucleosome arrangements without the regular fiber structure and that its dynamic behavior plays a critical role in regulating various genome functions.

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Dynamic chromatin behavior plays a critical role in various genome functions. However, it remains unclear how chromatin behavior changes during interphase, where the nucleus enlarges and genomic DNA doubles. While the previously reported chromatin movements varied during interphase when measured using a minute or longer time scale, we unveil that local chromatin motion captured by single-nucleosome imaging/tracking on a second time scale remained steady throughout G, S, and G phases in live human cells.

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Genomic information is encoded on long strands of DNA, which are folded into chromatin and stored in a tiny nucleus. Nuclear chromatin is a negatively charged polymer composed of DNA, histones, and various nonhistone proteins. Because of its highly charged nature, chromatin structure varies greatly depending on the surrounding environment (e.

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Liquid droplets formed inside the cell by liquid-liquid phase separation maintain membrane-less condensates/bodies (or compartments). These droplets are important for concentrating certain molecules and facilitating spatiotemporal regulation of cellular functions. 1,6-hexanediol (1,6-HD), an aliphatic alcohol, inhibits weak hydrophobic protein-protein/protein-RNA interactions required for the droplet formation (droplet melting activity) and is used here to elucidate the formation process of cytoplasmic/nuclear condensates/bodies.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Eukaryotic chromatin is a negatively charged structure made of DNA, histones, and nonhistone proteins, which can change shape based on the surrounding environment.
  • - Advances in technology have revealed that chromatin is not just a fixed structure but rather a fluid and dynamic entity, transitioning between different forms (like 10-nm fiber to 30-nm fiber).
  • - A combination of various imaging and analysis methods is crucial for accurately understanding chromatin organization in cells, as no single method can provide a complete picture.
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Although chromatin organization and dynamics play a critical role in gene transcription, how they interplay remains unclear. To approach this issue, we investigated genome-wide chromatin behavior under various transcriptional conditions in living human cells using single-nucleosome imaging. While transcription by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) is generally thought to need more open and dynamic chromatin, surprisingly, we found that active RNAPII globally constrains chromatin movements.

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The nucleus in eukaryotic cells is the site for genomic functions such as RNA transcription, DNA replication, and DNA repair/recombination. However, the nucleus is subjected to various mechanical forces associated with diverse cellular activities, including contraction, migration, and adhesion. Although it has long been assumed that the lamina structure, underlying filamentous mesh-work of the nuclear envelope, plays an important role in resisting mechanical forces, the involvement of compact chromatin in mechanical resistance has also recently been suggested.

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For cell division, negatively charged chromatin, in which nucleosome fibers (10 nm fibers) are irregularly folded [1-5], must be condensed into chromosomes and segregated. While condensin and other proteins are critical for organizing chromatin into the appropriate chromosome shape [6-17], free divalent cations such as Mg and Ca, which condense chromatin or chromosomes in vitro [18-28], have long been considered important, especially for local condensation, because the nucleosome fiber has a net negative charge and is by itself stretched like "beads on a string" by electrostatic repulsion. For further folding, other positively charged factors are required to decrease the charge and repulsion [29].

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A chromosome is a single long DNA molecule assembled along its length with nucleosomes and proteins. During interphase, a mammalian chromosome exists as a highly organized supramolecular globule in the nucleus. Here, we discuss new insights into how genomic DNA is packaged and organized within interphase chromosomes.

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In eukaryotic cells, highly condensed inactive/silenced chromatin has long been called "heterochromatin." However, recent research suggests that such regions are in fact not fully transcriptionally silent and that there exists only a moderate access barrier to heterochromatin. To further investigate this issue, it is critical to elucidate the physical properties of heterochromatin such as its total density in live cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • The eukaryotic genome is organized as chromatin, and its higher-order structures dynamically regulate gene expression and cellular processes, though their formation and behavior are not fully understood.
  • Researchers used advanced imaging techniques to observe how nucleosomes cluster into compact domains, which vary in movement based on factors like cell differentiation and chromatin composition.
  • Their findings suggest that these nucleosomal domains play a role in organizing chromosomes during cell division and may serve as functional units for genetic information throughout the cell cycle.
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  • Cells and their nuclei face mechanical stress during processes like contraction and migration, making structural stability crucial for genome protection.
  • Despite knowing a lot about nuclear structure, the physical and molecular mechanisms behind nuclear rigidity are not well understood.
  • Through experiments involving micromanipulation and biochemical changes to chromatin, this study shows that nuclear rigidity is influenced by nucleosomal fiber continuity and nucleosome interactions, highlighting the importance of chromatin structure in nuclear mechanics.
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Chromatin organization has an important role in the regulation of eukaryotic systems. Although recent studies have refined the three-dimensional models of chromatin organization with high resolution at the genome sequence level, little is known about how the most fundamental units of chromatin-nucleosomes-are positioned in three dimensions in vivo. Here we use electron cryotomography to study chromatin organization in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Direct visualization of yeast nuclear densities shows no evidence of 30-nm fibers.

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Chromatin DNA must be read out for various cellular functions, and copied for the next cell division. These processes are targets of many anticancer agents. Platinum-based drugs, such as cisplatin, have been used extensively in cancer chemotherapy.

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The existence of a 30-nm fiber as a basic folding unit for DNA packaging has remained a topic of active discussion. Here, we characterize the supramolecular structures formed by reversible Mg(2+)-dependent self-association of linear 12-mer nucleosomal arrays using microscopy and physicochemical approaches. These reconstituted chromatin structures, which we call "oligomers", are globular throughout all stages of cooperative assembly and range in size from ~50 nm to a maximum diameter of ~1,000 nm.

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Genetic information, which is stored in the long strand of genomic DNA as chromatin, must be scanned and read out by various transcription factors. First, gene-specific transcription factors, which are relatively small (∼50 kDa), scan the genome and bind regulatory elements. Such factors then recruit general transcription factors, Mediators, RNA polymerases, nucleosome remodellers, and histone modifiers, most of which are large protein complexes of 1-3 MDa in size.

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Since Flemming described a nuclear substance in the nineteenth century and named it "chromatin," this substance has fascinated biologists. What is the structure of chromatin? DNA is wrapped around core histones, forming a nucleosome fiber (10-nm fiber). This fiber has long been assumed to fold into a 30-nm chromatin fiber and subsequently into helically folded larger fibers or radial loops.

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Article Synopsis
  • Genomic DNA is structured as chromatin in a 3D form, allowing proteins to interact and carry out various cellular functions, although the exact mechanism of this interaction is still unclear.
  • Recent research, including cryomicroscopy and X-ray analyses, shows that chromatin is made of irregularly folded nucleosome fibers instead of a rigid 30-nm fiber, leading to a more dynamic and less constrained structure.
  • A combination of imaging techniques revealed that nucleosomes in living cells exhibit significant movement (about 50 nm every 30 ms) due to Brownian motion, suggesting that this dynamic behavior enhances chromatin accessibility for protein scanning of the genome.
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