Powered by Proximity Ligation
Hi-C is one of a suite of chromosome conformation capture (or proximity ligation) techniques originally devised to study the spatial organization of chromatin.1,2 Hi-C employs cost-effective, high-throughput, short-read sequencing to identify the interactions between genomic loci that are co-located in three-dimensional space, but may be separated by significant distances in the linear genome. This powerful methodology has since enabled significant improvements in genome assembly (of humans and other species), as well as structural variant and epigenetic analysis, and has unlocked many applications in metagenomics, microbiology, cytogenomics and oncology.
Overview of proximity ligation (Hi-C). From: Lieberman-Aiden E, Dekker J. Science. 2009; 326:289.
Learn more about conformational capture methods:
During the preparation of a proximity ligation library, DNA is crosslinked in vivo to fix the chromatin contained in the cell. Crosslinking “traps” DNA sequences that are in close proximity to one another, across the entire genome and between different chromosomes. In microbes, interactions between genomic DNA and mobile genetic elements (e.g. plasmids and transposons) are also captured. Crosslinked DNA is subsequently fragmented with endonucleases. Fragmented loci are biotinylated and proximity ligated to create chimeric junctions between adjacent sequences. Biotinylated junctions are purified and subjected to paired-end sequencing.
The information contained in these chimeric proximity junctions is not limited to sequence (position in the linear genome), but can be decoded to reveal the physical origin of each junction partner in the three-dimensional structure of the DNA. This in turn, enables improved insights in many areas of biology and medicine.
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