Browsing by Author "Wang, Ailun"
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Item Chromatin alternates between A and B compartments at kilobase scale for subgenic organization(Springer Nature, 2023) Harris, Hannah L.; Gu, Huiya; Olshansky, Moshe; Wang, Ailun; Farabella, Irene; Eliaz, Yossi; Kalluchi, Achyuth; Krishna, Akshay; Jacobs, Mozes; Cauer, Gesine; Pham, Melanie; Rao, Suhas S. P.; Dudchenko, Olga; Omer, Arina; Mohajeri, Kiana; Kim, Sungjae; Nichols, Michael H.; Davis, Eric S.; Gkountaroulis, Dimos; Udupa, Devika; Aiden, Aviva Presser; Corces, Victor G.; Phanstiel, Douglas H.; Noble, William Stafford; Nir, Guy; Di Pierro, Michele; Seo, Jeong-Sun; Talkowski, Michael E.; Aiden, Erez Lieberman; Rowley, M. Jordan; Center for Theoretical Biological PhysicsNuclear compartments are prominent features of 3D chromatin organization, but sequencing depth limitations have impeded investigation at ultra fine-scale. CTCF loops are generally studied at a finer scale, but the impact of looping on proximal interactions remains enigmatic. Here, we critically examine nuclear compartments and CTCF loop-proximal interactions using a combination of in situ Hi-C at unparalleled depth, algorithm development, and biophysical modeling. Producing a large Hi-C map with 33 billion contacts in conjunction with an algorithm for performing principal component analysis on sparse, super massive matrices (POSSUMM), we resolve compartments to 500 bp. Our results demonstrate that essentially all active promoters and distal enhancers localize in the A compartment, even when flanking sequences do not. Furthermore, we find that the TSS and TTS of paused genes are often segregated into separate compartments. We then identify diffuse interactions that radiate from CTCF loop anchors, which correlate with strong enhancer-promoter interactions and proximal transcription. We also find that these diffuse interactions depend on CTCF’s RNA binding domains. In this work, we demonstrate features of fine-scale chromatin organization consistent with a revised model in which compartments are more precise than commonly thought while CTCF loops are more protracted.Item RACER-m leverages structural features for sparse T cell specificity prediction(AAAS, 2024) Wang, Ailun; Lin, Xingcheng; Chau, Kevin Ng; Onuchic, José N.; Levine, Herbert; George, Jason T.; Center for Theoretical Biological PhysicsReliable prediction of T cell specificity against antigenic signatures is a formidable task, complicated by the immense diversity of T cell receptor and antigen sequence space and the resulting limited availability of training sets for inferential models. Recent modeling efforts have demonstrated the advantage of incorporating structural information to overcome the need for extensive training sequence data, yet disentangling the heterogeneous TCR-antigen interface to accurately predict MHC-allele-restricted TCR-peptide interactions has remained challenging. Here, we present RACER-m, a coarse-grained structural model leveraging key biophysical information from the diversity of publicly available TCR-antigen crystal structures. Explicit inclusion of structural content substantially reduces the required number of training examples and maintains reliable predictions of TCR-recognition specificity and sensitivity across diverse biological contexts. Our model capably identifies biophysically meaningful point-mutant peptides that affect binding affinity, distinguishing its ability in predicting TCR specificity of point-mutants from alternative sequence-based methods. Its application is broadly applicable to studies involving both closely related and structurally diverse TCR-peptide pairs.