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Stem Cell Differentiation Disperses Transcriptional Clusters via a Conserved Surface‐Condensate Trajectory

Klingberg, Tim; Wachter, Irina; Pancholi, Agnieszka ORCID iD icon 1; Akyel, Matthias; Gohar, Yomna; Kumar, Priya; Fernandes, Ana Miguel; Bao, Yuzhi; Schmidt-Heydt, Alica; Piepers, Marcel; Günthel, Alicia; Sobucki, Marcel; Kämmer, Elisa; Eroğlu-Kayıkçı, Süheyla; Allgeier, Stephan ORCID iD icon 2; Erhardt, Sylvia ORCID iD icon 1; Zaburdaev, Vasily ; Ferrai, Carmelo ; Hilbert, Lennart ORCID iD icon 1
1 Zoologisches Institut (ZOO), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)
2 Institut für Automation und angewandte Informatik (IAI), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)

Abstract:

Stem cells exhibit exceptionally prominent transcriptional clusters, which dissolve with progressing differentiation. Although these clusters are assigned central roles in embryonic gene regulation, their formation and loss during differentiation remain poorly understood. This study reveals that these prominent clusters disperse along a conserved trajectory in mouse embryonic stem cells, fruit fly testes, and zebrafish embryos. Imaging and lattice simulations show that these clusters form via surface condensation on H3K27ac-marked super-enhancer regions, which act as genomic scaffolds. Upon differentiation, partial loss of these active epigenetic marks and transcription-driven unfolding lead to dispersal of the prominent clusters. The block copolymer-based lattice simulations explain this process as a conserved trajectory through a three-dimensional state space, governed by surface condensation principles that extend beyond canonical liquid–liquid phase separation. This work marks surface condensation as a biophysical mechanism for the dynamic organization of stem cell-specific transcriptional hubs and demonstrates evolutionary conservation in several organisms. ... mehr


Verlagsausgabe §
DOI: 10.5445/IR/1000194089
Veröffentlicht am 10.06.2026
Originalveröffentlichung
DOI: 10.1002/advs.75924
Cover der Publikation
Zugehörige Institution(en) am KIT Institut für Automation und angewandte Informatik (IAI)
Zoologisches Institut (ZOO)
Publikationstyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Publikationsjahr 2026
Sprache Englisch
Identifikator ISSN: 2198-3844
KITopen-ID: 1000194089
Erschienen in Advanced Science
Verlag Wiley Open Access
Vorab online veröffentlicht am 09.06.2026
Schlagwörter biomolecular condensates, enhancer transcription control, gene expression, nuclear organization, stem cell differentiation
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