Summary The mouse X-inactivation center (Xic) orchestrates initiation of X inactivation by controlling the expression of the non-coding Xist transcript. The full extent of Xist’s regulatory landscape remains to be defined however. Here we use Chromosome Conformation Capture Carbon-Copy and super-resolution microscopy to analyse the spatial organisation of a 4.5Mb region including Xist. We uncover a series of discrete 200kb-1Mb topologically associating domains (TADs), present both before and after cell differentiation and on the active and inactive X. These domains align with several domain-wide epigenomic features as well as co-regulated gene clusters. Disruption of a TAD boundary causes ectopic chromosomal contacts and long-range transcriptional mis-regulation. Xist/Tsix illustrates the spatial segregation of oppositely regulated chromosomal neighborhoods, with their promoters lying in two adjacent TADs, each containing their known positive regulators. This led to the identification of a distal regulatory region of Tsix producing a novel long intervening RNA, Linx, within its TAD. In addition to uncovering a new principle of the cis-regulatory architecture of mammalian chromosomes, our study sets the stage for the full genetic dissection of the Xic.
Structured illumination microscopy is a method that can increase the spatial resolution of wide-field fluorescence microscopy beyond its classical limit by using spatially structured illumination light. Here we describe how this method can be applied in three dimensions to double the axial as well as the lateral resolution, with true optical sectioning. A grating is used to generate three mutually coherent light beams, which interfere in the specimen to form an illumination pattern that varies both laterally and axially. The spatially structured excitation intensity causes normally unreachable high-resolution information to become encoded into the observed images through spatial frequency mixing. This new information is computationally extracted and used to generate a three-dimensional reconstruction with twice as high resolution, in all three dimensions, as is possible in a conventional wide-field microscope. The method has been demonstrated on both test objects and biological specimens, and has produced the first light microscopy images of the synaptonemal complex in which the lateral elements are clearly resolved.
Fluorescence light microscopy allows multicolor visualization of cellular components with high specificity, but its utility has until recently been constrained by the intrinsic limit of spatial resolution. We applied three-dimensional structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM) to circumvent this limit and to study the mammalian nucleus. By simultaneously imaging chromatin, nuclear lamina, and the nuclear pore complex (NPC), we observed several features that escape detection by conventional microscopy. We could resolve single NPCs that colocalized with channels in the lamin network and peripheral heterochromatin. We could differentially localize distinct NPC components and detect double-layered invaginations of the nuclear envelope in prophase as previously seen only by electron microscopy. Multicolor 3D-SIM opens new and facile possibilities to analyze subcellular structures beyond the diffraction limit of the emitted light.Light microscopy is a key technology in modern cell biology and, in combination with immunofluorescence, fluorescent protein fusions, or in situ hybridization, allows the specific localization of nearly all cellular components. A fundamental limitation of optical microscopy is its low resolution relative to the scale of subcellular structures. This limitation occurs because light traveling through a lens cannot be focused to a point but only to an Airy disk (1) with a diameter of about half the wavelength of the emitted light (2,3). Because the wavelengths of visible light range from 400 to 700 nm, objects closer than 200 to 350 nm apart cannot be resolved but appear merged into one.
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