Genome-wide Analysis of the Biophysical Properties of Chromatin and Nuclear Proteins in Living Cells with Hi-D
Overview
Affiliations
To understand the dynamic nature of the genome, the localization and rearrangement of DNA and DNA-binding proteins must be analyzed across the entire nucleus of single living cells. Recently, we developed a computational light microscopy technique, called high-resolution diffusion (Hi-D) mapping, which can accurately detect, classify and map diffusion dynamics and biophysical parameters such as the diffusion constant, the anomalous exponent, drift velocity and model physical diffusion from the data at a high spatial resolution across the genome in living cells. Hi-D combines dense optical flow to detect and track local chromatin and nuclear protein motion genome-wide and Bayesian inference to characterize this local movement at nanoscale resolution. Here we present the Python implementation of Hi-D, with an option for parallelizing the calculations to run on multicore central processing units (CPUs). The functionality of Hi-D is presented to the users via user-friendly documented Python notebooks. Hi-D reduces the analysis time to less than 1 h using a multicore CPU with a single compute node. We also present different applications of Hi-D for live-imaging of DNA, histone H2B and RNA polymerase II sequences acquired with spinning disk confocal and super-resolution structured illumination microscopy.
Histone deacetylase in inflammatory bowel disease: novel insights.
Li C, Gu S, Zhang Y, Zhang Z, Wang J, Gao T Therap Adv Gastroenterol. 2025; 18:17562848251318833.
PMID: 39963253 PMC: 11831641. DOI: 10.1177/17562848251318833.