CTCF and cohesin physically associate on chromatin, yet they exchange on very different time scales—CTCF is far more dynamic (~1–2 min residence), while cohesin turnover is much slower (~22 min in G1)—supporting a “dynamic loop maintenance complex” model where loops repeatedly break and reform.
The field often treats CTCF/cohesin-defined chromatin loops as stable architectural anchors. This paper directly measures live-cell chromatin residence and nuclear search behaviors of endogenously tagged CTCF and Rad21 (cohesin subunit), and asks whether the molecular “loop maintenance complex” (LMC) is dynamically exchanging.
Values are as reported/inferred by the authors from single-molecule imaging and FRAP modeling; bounds/interpretation cautions are discussed in the text.
In their two-state modeling of CTCF search (bound/unbound, specific/non-specific decompositions), they report that after dissociation, CTCF searches ~~1 min to the next cognate site; cohesin topological engagements are much rarer, with an inferred ~33 min between specific topological engagements in G1.
The authors show (i) ChIP-seq co-localization and (ii) co-IP physical association between CTCF and cohesin, yet (iii) live-cell imaging reveals distinct exchange kinetics.
Using two-color PALM/dSTORM, they report clustering of CTCF and Rad21 and detect significant CTCF–cohesin co-localization at very short distances, with near independence beyond the diffraction limit; they also show a control where H2B and Halo-only do not show pair cross-correlation beyond complete spatial randomness.
Note: the exact C(r) values are not numerically provided in the excerpted text; this plot is qualitative only, consistent with the paper’s qualitative claims (C(r)>1 at short distances; ~CSR beyond diffraction limit).
The authors deposit ChIP-seq data in GEO under GSE90994.
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