1. What is the mechanism of DNA loop extrusion by cohesin-NIPBL?
We and others discovered previously that cohesin extrudes DNA into loops (Davidson, Science 2019) by undergoing large-scale conformational changes (Bauer, Cell 2021). In this project, we identified the force-generating step among these conformational changes (Pobegalov, Nat. Comms. 2023; in collaboration with Maxime Molodtsov; Crick Inst.), and in collaboration with Cees Dekker’s group (Univ. Delft) provided evidence that cohesin does not have to entrap DNA inside its ring structure to extrude loops (Pradhan, Cell Rep. 2022; Barth, Sci. Rep. 2022), showed that cohesin frequently changes the direction of DNA loop extrusion (Barth, bioRxiv 2023) and discovered that cohesin negatively supercoils DNA during loop extrusion (Davidson, bioRxiv 2024, Janissen, bioRxiv 2024).
2. How is DNA loop extrusion by cohesin-NIPBL regulated?
CTCF was known to have an important role in specifying the location of cohesin loops, but the mechanistic basis of this functions was incompletely understood. In this project we discovered that CTCF is sufficient to stop loop extruding cohesin molecules in an orientation and tension dependent manner (Davidson, Barth, Nature 2023; in collaboration with the Dekker lab), and in collaboration with the Tachibana (MPIB) and Mirny labs (MIT) we found that the replicative helicase MCM and active genes can also function as boundaries for cohesin-mediated loop extrusion (Dequeker, Nature 2022; Banigan, PNAS 2023).
3. Are chromatin fibers in cells folded by loop extrusion?
It is unknown whether cohesin can not only fold DNA but also chromatin fibers in cells by loop extrusion. We have now found that a cohesin mutant that is reduced in DNA loop extrusion in vitro is also reduced in chromatin looping in cells, supporting the hypothesis that cohesin also forms chromatin loops by extrusion in cells (Davidson, bioRxiv 2024). Furthermore, in collaboration with the Dekker and Ellenberg laboratories (EMBL), we found that SMC complexes can bypass nucleosomes during loop extrusion in vitro (Pradhan, Cell Rep., 2021) and that cohesin forms loops in cells in a manner that is consistent with loop extrusion (Beckwith, bioRxiv 2021).
4. What determines whether cohesin mediates loop extrusion or sister chromatid cohesion?
How cohesin’s functions in loop extrusion and sister chromatid cohesion are specified is unknown. We discovered a partial separation-of-function mutant of cohesin, which is still able to extrude DNA but unable to mediate cohesion, suggesting that cohesin uses at least partially distinct mechanisms for these two functions (Nagasaka, Mol. Cell 2023).
5. What are the cellular functions of loop formation by cohesin-NIPBL ?
The role of cohesin in gene regulation is controversial since cohesin depletion experiments lead only to limited gene regulation defects in cell culture models. One potential explanation for this conundrum is that cohesin is only required for specific gene activation events during development. Support for this hypothesis comes from the observation that mutations in the activating cohesin subunit NIPBL cause the congenital disease Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS), which is thought to be caused by developmental gene regulation defects. We found that some of the NIPBL mutations associated with CdLS cause DNA loop extrusion defects in vitro, consistent with the possibility that cohesin-mediated loop extrusion is required for developmental gene regulation (Panarotto, PNAS 2022). In collaboration with the Busslinger lab (IMP) we also found that cohesin mediated loop extrusion is essential for recombination events in developing B cells for the generation of a diverse antibody repertoire (Hill, Nature 2020; Hill, Nat. Comms. 2023).