The large-scale structure and dynamics of genomes and randomly branching double-folded ring polymers

21 mai - 11h30 - 13h

Centre de recherche - Paris

Amphithéâtre Marie Curie

Pavillon Curie, 11 rue Pierre & Marie Curie, Paris 5ème

Description

Random tree-like structures are ubiquitous in Nature and have been intensely studied in analytical as well as computational works. The most obvious example from soft matter are randomly branching polymers, but annealed tree-like structures also emerge in dense solutions of non-concatenated and unknotted circular (ring) polymers. In the biological context, they represent generic models for describing the large-scale conformational properties of bacterial DNA, chromosomal DNA during interphase and viral RNA. In the seminar, I will spend quite some time in the beginning to motivate the connection between genome folding and randomly branching polymers before presenting graph-theoretical and simulation results on static and dynamic properties on randomly branching double-folded ring polymers.

Organisateurs

PCC Seminar Team

Institut Curie

Orateurs

Ralf Everaers

ENS de Lyon, CNRS, Laboratoire de Physique (LPENSL UMR5672) et Centre Blaise Pascal

Invité(es) par

Jean-François Joanny

Institut Curie

Une question sur le séminaire ?

Jean-François Joanny

jean-francois.joanny@curie.fr