Using AI to explore the 3D structure of the genome

Two meters of DNA is crammed into the nucleus of every human cell. Bin Zhang wants to know how gene expression works in this minuscule space.

Inside every human cell, 2 meters of DNA is crammed into a nucleus that is only one-hundredth of a millimeter in diameter.

To fit inside that tiny space, the genome must fold into a complex structure known as chromatin, made up of DNA and proteins. The structure of that chromatin, in turn, helps to determine which of the genes will be expressed in a given cell. Neurons, skin cells, and immune cells each express different genes depending on which of their genes are accessible to be transcribed.

Deciphering those structures experimentally is a time-consuming process, making it difficult to compare the 3D genome structures found in different cell types. MIT Professor Bin Zhang is taking a computational approach to this challenge, using computer simulations and generative artificial intelligence to determine these structures.

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