Publications by authors named "W Boucher"

Article Synopsis
  • Enhancers interact with transcription factors, chromatin regulators, and non-coding RNA to influence gene expression, particularly during cell differentiation.
  • The study examines 3D genome structures of mouse embryonic stem cells transitioning from pluripotency to neuroectodermal differentiation, revealing significant reorganization of chromosome interactions.
  • This reorganization leads to the creation of multiway hubs that connect enhancers and promoters from distant chromosomal regions, implicating these structural changes in the regulation of gene expression and the establishment of new cell identities.
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To understand how the nucleosome remodeling and deacetylase (NuRD) complex regulates enhancers and enhancer-promoter interactions, we have developed an approach to segment and extract key biophysical parameters from live-cell three-dimensional single-molecule trajectories. Unexpectedly, this has revealed that NuRD binds to chromatin for minutes, decompacts chromatin structure and increases enhancer dynamics. We also uncovered a rare fast-diffusing state of enhancers and found that NuRD restricts the time spent in this state.

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Background: Stem cell differentiation involves major chromatin reorganisation, heterochromatin formation and genomic relocalisation of structural proteins, including heterochromatin protein 1 gamma (HP1γ). As the principal reader of the repressive histone marks H3K9me2/3, HP1 plays a key role in numerous processes including heterochromatin formation and maintenance.

Results: We find that HP1γ is citrullinated in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) and this diminishes when cells differentiate, indicating that it is a dynamically regulated post-translational modification during stem cell differentiation.

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A major challenge in single-molecule imaging is tracking the dynamics of proteins or complexes for long periods of time in the dense environments found in living cells. Here, we introduce the concept of using FRET to enhance the photophysical properties of photo-modulatable (PM) fluorophores commonly used in such studies. By developing novel single-molecule FRET pairs, consisting of a PM donor fluorophore (either mEos3.

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