Abstract

The 3D folding structure formed by different genomic regions of a chromosome is still poorly understood. So far, only relatively simple geometric features, like distances and angles between different genomic regions, have been evaluated. This work is concerned with more complex geometric properties, i.e., the complete shape formed by genomic regions. Our work is based on statistical shape theory and we use different approaches to analyze the considered structures, e.g., shape uniformity test, 3D point-based registration, Fisher distribution, and 3D non-rigid image registration for shape normalization. We have applied these approaches to analyze 3D microscopy images of the X-chromosome where four consecutive genomic regions (BACs) have been simultaneously labeled by multicolor FISH. We have acquired two sets of four consecutive genomic regions with an overlap of three regions. From the experimental results, it turned out that for all data sets the complete structure is non-random. In addition, we found that the shapes of active and inactive X-chromosomal genomic regions are statistically independent. Moreover, we reconstructed the average 3D structure of chromatin in a small genomic region (below 4 Mb) based on five BACs resulting from two overlapping four BAC regions. We found that geometric normalization with respect to the nucleus shape based on non-rigid image registration has a significant influence on the location of the genomic regions.

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