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            Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 25, 2026
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            Abstract In the last decade, DNA-DNA proximity ligation assays opened powerful new ways to study the 3D organization of genomes and have become a mainstay experimental technology. Yet many aspects of these experiments remain poorly understood. We study the inner workings of DNA-DNA proximity ligation assays through numerical experiments and theoretical modeling. Chromosomes are modeled at nucleosome resolution and evolved in time via molecular dynamics. A virtual Hi-C experiment reproduces, in-silico, the different steps of the Hi-C protocol, including: crosslinking of chromatin to an underlying proteic matrix, enzymatic digestion of DNA, and subsequent proximity ligation of DNA open ends. The protocol is simulated on ensembles of different structures as well as individual structures, enabling the construction of ligation maps and the calculation of ligation probabilities as functions of genomic and Euclidean distance. The methods help to assess the effect of the many variables of the Hi-C experiment and of subsequent data processing methods on the quality of the final results.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 4, 2026
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            The spatiotemporal organization of proteins and lipids on the cell surface has direct functional consequences for signaling, sorting, and endocytosis. Earlier studies have shown that multiple types of membrane proteins, including transmembrane proteins that have cytoplasmic actin binding capacity and lipid-tethered glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs), form nanoscale clusters driven by active contractile flows generated by the actin cortex. To gain insight into the role of lipids in organizing membrane domains in living cells, we study the molecular interactions that promote the actively generated nanoclusters of GPI-APs and transmembrane proteins. This motivates a theoretical description, wherein a combination of active contractile stresses and transbilayer coupling drives the creation of active emulsions, mesoscale liquid order (lo) domains of the GPI-APs and lipids, at temperatures greater than equilibrium lipid phase segregation. To test these ideas, we use spatial imaging of molecular clustering combined with local membrane order, and we demonstrate that mesoscopic domains enriched in nanoclusters of GPI-APs are maintained by cortical actin activity and transbilayer interactions and exhibit significant lipid order, consistent with predictions of the active composite model.more » « less
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            Collective cell migration is an essential process throughout the lives of multicellular organisms, for example in embryonic development, wound healing and tumour metastasis. Substrates or interfaces associated with these processes are typically curved, with radii of curvature comparable to many cell lengths. Using both artificial geometries and lung alveolospheres derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells, here we show that cells sense multicellular-scale curvature and that it plays a role in regulating collective cell migration. As the curvature of a monolayer increases, cells reduce their collectivity and the multicellular flow field becomes more dynamic. Furthermore, hexagonally shaped cells tend to aggregate in solid-like clusters surrounded by non-hexagonal cells that act as a background fluid. We propose that cells naturally form hexagonally organized clusters to minimize free energy, and the size of these clusters is limited by a bending energy penalty. We observe that cluster size grows linearly as sphere radius increases, which further stabilizes the multicellular flow field and increases cell collectivity. As a result, increasing curvature tends to promote the fluidity in multicellular monolayer. Together, these findings highlight the potential for a fundamental role of curvature in regulating both spatial and temporal characteristics of three-dimensional multicellular systems.more » « less
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