Developmental heterogeneity in DNA packaging patterns influences T-cell activation and transmigration

Gupta, Soumya ; Marcel, Nimi ; Talwar, Shefali ; Garg, Megha ; R., Indulaxmi ; Perumalsamy, Lakshmi R. ; Sarin, Apurva ; Shivashankar, G. V. (2012) Developmental heterogeneity in DNA packaging patterns influences T-cell activation and transmigration PLoS One, 7 (9). e43718. ISSN 1932-6203

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Official URL: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.137...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043718

Abstract

Cellular differentiation programs are accompanied by large-scale changes in nuclear organization and gene expression. In this context, accompanying transitions in chromatin assembly that facilitates changes in gene expression and cell behavior in a developmental system are poorly understood. Here, we address this gap and map structural changes in chromatin organization during murine T-cell development, to describe an unusual heterogeneity in chromatin organization and associated functional correlates in T-cell lineage. Confocal imaging of DNA assembly in cells isolated from bone marrow, thymus and spleen reveal the emergence of heterogeneous patterns in DNA organization in mature T-cells following their exit from the thymus. The central DNA pattern dominated in immature precursor cells in the thymus whereas both central and peripheral DNA patterns were observed in naïve and memory cells in circulation. Naïve T-cells with central DNA patterns exhibited higher mechanical pliability in response to compressive loads in vitro and transmigration assays in vivo, and demonstrated accelerated expression of activation-induced marker CD69. T-cell activation was characterized by marked redistribution of DNA assembly to a central DNA pattern and increased nuclear size. Notably, heterogeneity in DNA patterns recovered in cells induced into quiescence in culture, suggesting an internal regulatory mechanism for chromatin reorganization. Taken together, our results uncover an important component of plasticity in nuclear organization, reflected in chromatin assembly, during T-cell development, differentiation and transmigration.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Public Library of Science.
ID Code:95890
Deposited On:26 Nov 2012 12:16
Last Modified:19 May 2016 08:27

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