Mapping the nuclear landscape with multiplexed super-resolution fluorescence microscopy

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The nucleus coordinates many different processes. Visualizing how these are spatially organized requires imaging protein complexes, epigenetic marks, and DNA across scales from single molecules to the whole nucleus. To accomplish this, we developed a multiplexed imaging protocol to localize 13 different nuclear targets with nanometer precision in single cells. We show that nuclear specification into active and repressive states exists along a spectrum of length scales, emerging below one micron and becoming strengthened at the nanoscale with unique organizational principles in both heterochromatin and euchromatin. HP1-α was positively correlated with DNA at the microscale but uncorrelated at the nanoscale. RNA Polymerase II, p300, and CDK9 were positively correlated at the microscale but became partitioned below 300 nm. Perturbing histone acetylation or transcription disrupted nanoscale organization but had less effect at the microscale. We envision that our imaging and analysis pipeline will be useful to reveal the organizational principles not only of the cell nucleus but also other cellular compartments.

Article activity feed