In this image, nearby regions on a chain
of DNA are indicated using similar colors. The fractal globule has a
hierarchical organization; regions nearby along the chain are also nearby in
3-D.
Image 8: Discovered by Giuseppe Peano in
1890, Peano curves are one-dimensional curves that densely fill
higher-dimensional space. A published 3-D map of the genome suggests that long
stretches of DNA fold into Peano, curve-like structures.
A team of researchers from Harvard
University, the Broad Institute of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and MIT
deciphered the 3-D structure of the human genome, paving the way for new
insights into genomic function and expanding our understanding of how cellular
DNA folds at scales that dwarf the double helix.
The research was supported in part by
the National Science Foundation. To learn more, see the story in the online
Harvard Gazette the A look inside Scientists have deciphered 3-D structure of
the human genome.
(Date of Image: 2009)
Credit: Leonld A. Mirny and Maxim
Imakaev
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