Epigenetic-structural changes in X chromosomes promote Xic pairing during early differentiation from mouse embryonic stem cells

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Abstract

X chromosome inactivation center (Xic) pairing is robustly observed during the differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells from female mouse embryos, and this process is related to X chromosome inactivation, the circadian clock, intra-nucleus architecture, and metabolism. However, the mechanisms underlying the identification and approach of X chromosome pairs in the crowded nucleus are unclear. To elucidate the driving force of Xic pairing, we developed a coarse-grained molecular dynamics model of intranuclear chromosomes in ES cells and in cells 2 days after the onset of differentiation (2-days cells) by considering intrachromosome epigenetic-structural feature-dependent mechanics. The analysis of the experimental data showed X-chromosomes change to specifically softer than autosomes during the cell differentiation by the rearrangement of their distributions of open-close chromatin regions, and the simulations of these models exhibited such softening promoted the mutual approach of the Xic pair. These findings suggested that local intrachromosomal epigenetic features may contribute to the regulation of cell species-dependent differences in intranuclear architecture.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
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License: CC-BY-4.0