Searching journal content for articles similar to Gesson et al. 26 (4): 462.

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  1. ...at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 43205, USA Corresponding author: Parthun.1@osu.eduAbstractA large fraction of the interacts with the nuclear periphery through lamina-associated domains (LADs), repressive regions which play an important role in organization and gene regulation across...
  2. ...test the hypothesis that change in the expression of lamina-associated proteins and nuclear shape leads to redistribution of LADs, followed by altered binding of pioneer factor FOXA2 and by up-regulation of lipid synthesis and storage, culminating in steatosis in younger NAFLD patients (aged 21...
  3. ...-cell activation became preferentially associated with A2 subcompartments and were constrained to the relative proximity of the lamina. Thus, lamina associations influence internal nuclear organization, and changes in LADs during T-cell activationmay provide an important additional mode of gene regulation...
  4. ...Power-law behavior of transcriptional bursting regulated by enhancer–promoter communication Zihao Wang1,2,3, Zhenquan Zhang1,2,3, Songhao Luo1,2,3, Tianshou Zhou1,2 and Jiajun Zhang1,2 1Guangdong Province Key Laboratory of Computational Science, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, P.R. China...
  5. ..., and binding is modulated by mitotic phosphorylation. Cell 73 : 1267 – 1279 . Furukawa, K., , Pante, N. , Aebi, U. , Gerace. L. Furukawa, K., Pante, N. Aebi, U. and Gerace. L. 1995 . Cloning of a cDNA for lamina-associated polypeptide 2 (LAP2) and identification of regions that specify targeting to the nuclear...
  6. ...of heterochromatin, namely, the histone H3 lysine 9 methyltransferase DIM-5, Heterochromatin Protein 1 (HP1), which specifically binds to the product of DIM-5 (trimethylated H3 lysine 9 [H3K9me3]), and DIM-3 (importin alpha), which is involved in DIM-5 localization. The average genome configuration of the wild...
  7. ...–Madison, Madison, WI 53715, USA Corresponding authors: Xinyu.zhao@wisc.edu, bhattacharyy@waisman.wisc.edu, sroy@biostat.wisc.eduAbstractRNA-binding proteins (RNA-BPs) play critical roles in development and disease to regulate gene expression. However, -wide identification of their targets in primary human cells...
  8. ...not identified. Nuclear receptors are ideal candidate TFs for integrating microbe-derived signals since, for many, their transcriptional activity can be positively or negatively regulated by the binding of metabolic or hormonal ligands (Evans and Mangelsdorf 2014). However, the roles of nuclear receptors in host...
  9. ...the centromere (Perpelescu and Fukagawa 2011). One of these proteins is CENPB, a DNAbinding protein that binds to the alpha satellite at the CENPB box, a 17-bp sequence motif that is found in a subset of monomers on all human chromosomes except the Y (Masumoto et al. 1989; Muro et al. 1992; Haaf and Ward 1994...
  10. ...Replication timing is regulated by the number of MCMs loaded at origins Shankar P. Das 1 , Tyler Borrman 1 , Victor W.T. Liu 1 , Scott C.-H. Yang 2 , 3 , John Bechhoefer 2 and Nicholas Rhind 1 1Department...
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