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  • DNA is what they call the molecule of life.

  • It carries the genetic code of an organism.

  • And we're interested in the structure.

  • And the structure of DNA is a right-handed double helix.

  • where each one of the strings that form the helix is made of a sugar group and a phosphate group

  • alternating - sugar-phosphate, sugar-phosphate,... And that's called the backbone.

  • To each sugar-phosphate group is attached a nitrogenous base - just call it a base.

  • And the bases in the two backbones pair, A with T and C with G, and they are held together with hydrogen bonds.

  • For each turn of the helix - so this would be a full turn of the helix - you will expect to have 10.5 base pairs/turn,

  • in what we call B DNA. It is important to note that this is right handed for the DNA that is in most organisms.

  • If we put the DNA of all the chromosomes in the human genome together, we have more than 3 billion base pairs.

  • Three billion base pairs of DNA measure approximately two meters.

  • All that DNA fits into one very small cell, that is 10 micrometers in diameter.

  • Every cell in your body has two meters of DNA in it.

  • And, you can imagine then what an important problem it is to package this DNA in such a way that is easily

  • accessible for all the cellular transactions; and at the same time it doesn't overflow, or put too much stress

  • on the cell, because of the sheer amount of genetic material in there.

  • So, in my case, I like to study the geometrical and topological properties of DNA.

  • So, even though we are able to model DNA in its... in all its atomistic detail - into going atom

  • by atom and looking at forces and interactions -

  • we're not so much interested in that; we're interested in looking at DNA as either a ribbon, or just as a curve.

  • When we model DNA as a curve, we're talking about the curve drawn by the axis of the double helix.

  • So this DNA molecule will be modeled as just a curve that is properly embedded in three dimensional space.

  • So we can model DNA in the atomistic detail, or we can look at it from further away and model it as a ribbon

  • where each one of the sugar-phosphate backbones is one of the boundaries of the ribbon.

  • So you will have a boundary curve that is blue, and a boundary curve that is red.

  • Still, the axis of the ribbon is this pink curve.

  • And the advantage of modeling it as a ribbon is that, then, you can measure the torsion of this DNA molecule,

  • as it writhes in space, and as it's packaged in organisms.

  • If you just model DNA - so you go further down in the level of resolution - and you model DNA as a single curve

  • that does not self-intersect, then we can start asking questions about topological entanglement.

  • And how much this curve wraps around itself.

  • In the human genome, the chromosomes are linear pieces of DNA.

  • If we look at the chromosomes of bacteria - a bacterial cell will have a single chromosome,

  • and that chromosome is circular.

  • So, no ends to deal with, and just one circle of DNA - also very long - that has to be packaged inside the cell.

  • - Are they like a tangled mess, or are they packed in like neat coils...? Would you describe those things

  • as messy or neat?

  • - Well, that's a wonderful question..! So... it depends! Think about the human DNA...

  • These curves will wrap around proteins called histones, and form some sort of bead necklace.

  • And then these bead necklace... and it will coil upon itself, so...

  • - So it's a coil of a coil...? - It's a coil of a coil of a coil of a coil of a coil...

  • So if we look here at the diameter of the native DNA - so the diameter here is 2 nanometers.

  • Here, the diameter is approximately 10 nanometers. And then there's higher levels of coiling,

  • until you get to the representation that you saw in your high school biology

  • where the chromosomes are very highly organized and very tightly packed like that.

  • Now if we look at the cell cycle for a human cell, the chromosome don't always look like that.

  • The chromosomes look like that at metaphase - right before the cell is going to separate into two cells.

  • But at the first stage of the cell cycle... So if we consider the cell cycle as starting here,

  • this is what we call the G-naught/G-one phase of the cell cycle - or interphase.

  • Then there is the s-phase - where replication takes place. There is G-2... and the metaphase...

  • and right here we will have cell division.

  • If we focus at the interphase, DNA is a tangled mess. But there must be some organization in there...

  • Because if it was a completely random tangled mess,

  • then you can imagine that the cell would not function properly.

  • So there is some organization. But if we zoom in and look at the cell at this stage of the cell cycle,

  • we can see the different chromosomes that look like noodles, but they occupy distinct territories

  • within the cell nucleus. And then, you're looking here... What the question is 'is there organization here?',

  • 'is there interaction between chromosomes?', 'are some chromosomes more likely to be found on the periphery

  • of the cell nucleus?', 'are some chromsomes more likely to be found in... toward the center of the cell nucleus?', ...

  • All those are important questions.

  • - How can a mathematician even begin to think about this?!

  • - Well, we start... simply find the problem... We start looking at DNA as a curve.

  • So each one of these chromosomes will now be just a curve - no sequence, no helix...,

  • no complexity other than this very long curve embedded in a very small environment.

  • And then we can use polymer models. We can model these in the computer where the curve is still having

  • a smooth parametrization: for each one of these curves, we turn these curves into polygonal curves...

  • It will be just a bunch of vertices and edges.

  • And these polygonal curves can have different properties. But you can imagine that, by doing this,

  • we have simplified the problem dramatically: now we just have a sequence of vertices

  • and their coordinates in space, and the knowledge that vertex-1 connects to vertex-2 connects to vertex-3, etc.

  • When we have a circular chromosome, then vertex-n will connect back to 1. And we can put a restriction

  • that the edges be of same length, so that we have an equilateral chain.

  • Now we can put restrictions on the chain, and we can approximate the behaviour of a DNA molecule

  • using a polygonal chain.

  • So, if you have a circle like this, and then, well... it can be moving in space just by thermal motion.

  • And we are interested in finding all conformation, not just the circle that could lay flat on the table.

  • Does it coil upon itself? If so, how many times does it coil upon itself?

  • Or these circles could be knotted, so the knot could look nice and fat like that,

  • But the knot could also be a very tight knot, or it could have some coiling about it,

  • where if you looked at it, you would not recognize its identity; but it's still exactly the same knot.

  • So we want to explore the space of possible conformations for a given topology,

  • be it an open circle or a trefoil knot like this one.

  • And then apply that knowledge to the models of packing. Now, if we take a very long chain,

  • and we allow it to move in three dimensional space, we can measure geometrical properties, like

  • the writhe, which measures the amount of coiling of this curve around itself; or we could measure the radius of

  • of gyration, which intuitively is the radius of the smallest sphere that contains this chain.

  • If we do that, then we can apply that directly to a chromosome, and think 'well, what is the space that

  • a chromosome could occupy if it wasn't constrained, if it wasn't in three dimensional space?'

  • Well, a chromosome would occupy such space if it was in three dimensional space. And then we compare that to

  • to the space that it occupies in the nucleus. And that gives us some measure of the amount of compaction

  • this chain is undergoing as it's packaged inside the cell nucleus.

DNA is what they call the molecule of life.

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