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25 - 30 January 2025
San Francisco, California, US
Conference 13326 > Paper 13326-24
Paper 13326-24

Quantifying the spatial distribution of post-translational histone modifications using 3D spectroscopic single-molecule localization microscopy

26 January 2025 • 12:10 PM - 12:30 PM PST | Moscone Center, Room 307 (Level 3 South)

Abstract

Super-resolution microscopy has enabled studies that probe protein spatial distribution at the nanoscale. This, in turn, has made it possible to study the distribution of post-translational modifications in the nucleus. Cancer is associated with widespread alterations in gene expression. It is of interest to classify the resulting change in the spatial distribution of post-translational modifications. However, there is a lack of studies that examine the interactions of multiple histone modifications in a single nucleus. We quantified the individual distribution and clustering behaviors of H3K27me3 and H3K27ac and classified the level of contact between these histone modifications using spectroscopic single-molecule localization microscopy (sSMLM). We also associated the detected changes in these parameters with degrees of cancer malignancy and with drug-induced perturbations in methylation machinery.

Presenter

Benjamin Brenner
Northwestern Univ. (United States)
Benjamin Brenner is a PhD student in Hao Zhang's lab. His focus is developing novel applications of single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) and spectroscopic SMLM (sSMLM) for Biology labs.
Presenter/Author
Benjamin Brenner
Northwestern Univ. (United States)
Author
Northwestern Univ. (United States)
Author
Northwestern Univ. (United States)
Author
Northwestern Univ. (United States)