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Home NEWS Science News Health

New Micro-C Technique Maps 3D Genome at Nucleosome Scale

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
July 13, 2026
in Health
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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A Revolutionary Leap in 3D Genome Mapping: Micro-C and Region Capture Micro-C

Understanding the spatial organization of the genome within the nucleus has remained a pivotal challenge in molecular biology. Now, a groundbreaking advancement known as Micro-C, alongside its evolution Region Capture Micro-C (RCMC), is redefining how scientists visualize chromatin architecture at unprecedented nucleosome-level resolution. This new suite of techniques marks a significant upgrade over traditional chromosome conformation capture methods, providing insights that were previously unattainable.

Unlike earlier methods such as Hi-C that depend heavily on restriction enzymes targeting specific DNA motifs, Micro-C utilizes in situ micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion to fragment chromatin without bias toward sequence motifs. This crucial innovation allows for the cleavage of chromatin at nucleosome boundaries, producing mononucleosomal DNA fragments that can accurately represent genome contacts at the finest scale. Following MNase digestion, the DNA fragments undergo biotin labeling and proximity ligation while still crosslinked, ensuring that only genuinely physically proximal nucleosomes are ligated.

This refined approach leads to the selective recovery of ligated nucleosomal DNA through biotin pulldown, enabling the generation of chromatin contact maps that reach nucleosome resolution. Such granularity unveils key 3D genome features missed by prior capture techniques, including subtle promoter-enhancer looping interactions and intricate chromatin folding patterns fundamental to gene regulation.

Region Capture Micro-C (RCMC) builds on the foundation of Micro-C by incorporating a targeted capture step to enrich ligation products corresponding to specific genomic regions. This selective enrichment empowers researchers to probe loci of interest with greater sequencing depth and accuracy, making it invaluable for studying complex regulatory landscapes or conducting extensive comparative analyses across multiple experimental conditions. Notably, RCMC mitigates the high cost and computational burden associated with whole-genome sequencing in chromatin conformation studies.

The accessibility of the Micro-C protocol further enhances its appeal. Capable of being completed within four days—and requiring merely two additional days for the capture step—this method can be performed by any experienced molecular biologist equipped with standard wet lab techniques. Such efficiency bridges a critical gap in the field, making high-resolution 3D genome mapping widely feasible.

By unlocking a new level of structural detail, Micro-C and RCMC stand to revolutionize genome biology. Researchers can now chart the complexities of chromatin interactions that underpin gene expression, cellular identity, and disease states with unparalleled precision. This technological leap promises novel discoveries in fields ranging from epigenetics and developmental biology to cancer research.

As this innovative method gains traction, its potential applications extend beyond basic research. Clinical investigations into chromatin alterations during disease progression may soon benefit from the incisive clarity provided by Micro-C and RCMC. These tools face the future of genome architecture exploration with the promise of revealing secrets that have remained hidden in the folded genome for decades.

In summary, Micro-C and its targeted counterpart, RCMC, offer a transformative approach to decoding 3D genome organization. Their combination of high resolution, specificity, and practical execution herald a new era in understanding genome dynamics at the nucleosome scale, illuminating the intricate dance of DNA within the nucleus like never before.

Subject of Research: 3D genome organization at nucleosome resolution using Micro-C and Region Capture Micro-C (RCMC)

Article Title: Mapping 3D genome organization at nucleosome-scale with Micro-C and Region Capture Micro-C (RCMC)

Article References:
Huseyin, M.K., Hong, C.K.Y., Nagano, M. et al. Mapping 3D genome organization at nucleosome-scale with Micro-C and Region Capture Micro-C (RCMC). Nat Protoc (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41596-026-01393-3

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41596-026-01393-3

Tags: 3D genome mapping techniquesadvances in chromatin interaction mappingbiotin labeling and proximity ligationchromosome conformation capture methodsgenome spatial organization visualizationhigh-resolution genome architecturein situ micrococcal nuclease digestionlimitations of traditional Hi-C methodsMicro-C chromatin architecturenucleosome-level genome organizationnucleosome-resolved chromatin contactsstructural insights into promoter-enhancer loops

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