Search results for "chromatin"

showing 10 items of 490 documents

321. Sea Urchin sns Chromatin Insulator Prevents Silencing and Positional Effect Variegation of Oncoretroviral Vectors Transgene Expression in Murine…

2006

Silencing and position effect are considered significant obstacles to obtain a consistent level of transgene expression in viral gene therapy. Furthermore recent studies had shown that retroviruses tend to land on active genes with the potential consequence of insertional mutagenesis. The inclusion of elements, such as chromatin insulators, capable to insulate a gene from the surrounding chromatin effects at the integration site should improve both efficacy and safety of gene therapy vectors. We have previously characterized a 265 bp insulator element, termed sns, localized at the 3’ end of the early histone H2A gene of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. This sequence contains three cis-…

PharmacologyTransgeneBiologyMolecular biologyChromatinInsertional mutagenesisPosition effectDrug DiscoveryHistone H2AGeneticsMolecular MedicineGene silencingEnhancerMolecular BiologyTranscription factorMolecular Therapy
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Role of Redox Signaling, Protein Phosphatases and Histone Acetylation in the Inflammatory Cascade in Acute Pancreatitis: Therapeutic Implications

2010

Acute pancreatitis starts as a local inflammation of the pancreatic tissue but often leads to the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and death by multiple organ failure. Pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly TNF-alpha and Il-1beta, play a pivotal role together with oxidative stress and glutathione depletion in the inflammatory response in this disease. Most inflammatory mediators act through mitogen activated protein kinases and nuclear factor kB. Nevertheless, elucidation of the precise mechanisms involved in activation and attenuation phases of the inflammatory cascade is still underway. Redox signaling mediated by inactivation of protein phosphatases and histone acetylation trigg…

Phosphodiesterase InhibitorsImmunologyPhosphataseBiologyHistonesDual-specificity phosphatasePhosphoprotein PhosphatasesHumansImmunology and AllergyPancreasHistone AcetyltransferasesInflammationPharmacologyHistone AcetyltransferasesKinaseAcetylationGeneral MedicineProtein phosphatase 2ChromatinCell biologyHistone Deacetylase InhibitorsHistonePancreatitisBiochemistryAcetylationAcute Diseasebiology.proteinSignal transductionOxidation-ReductionSignal TransductionInflammation & Allergy - Drug Targets
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Computational Chromosome Conformation Capture by Correlation of ChIP-seq at CTCF motifs

2018

Background: Transcription factors (TFs) bind to gene promoters or distal regulatory elements that interact with the promoter via chromatin looping. While the TF binding sites themselves are detected genome-wide by ChIP-seq experiments, it is difficult to associate them regulated genes without information of chromatin looping. Recent experimental techniques such as Hi-C or ChIA-PET measure long-range interactions genome-wide but are experimentally elaborate and have limited resolution. Here, we present Computational Chromosome Conformation Capture by Correlation of ChIP-seq at CTCF motifs (7C). Results: While ChIP-seq was not designed to detect contacts, the formaldehyde treatment in the ChI…

PhysicsChromosome conformation captureCTCFgenetic processesnatural sciencesHuman genomePromoterComputational biologyBinding siteSequence motifTranscription factorChromatin
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The PVT-1 oncogene is a Myc protein target that is overexpressed in transformed cells

2007

The human PVT-1 gene is located on chromosome 8 telomeric to the c-Myc gene and it is frequently involved in the translocations occurring in variant Burkitt's lymphomas and murine plasmacytomas. It has been proposed that PVT-1 regulates c-Myc gene transcription over a long distance. To get new insights into the functional relationships between the two genes, we have investigated PVT-1 and c-Myc expression in normal human tissues and in transformed cells. Our findings indicate that PVT-1 expression is restricted to a relative low number of normal tissues compared to the wide distribution of c-Myc mRNA, whereas the gene is highly expressed in many transformed cell types including neuroblastom…

PhysiologyClinical BiochemistryBiologyCell LineProto-Oncogene Proteins c-mycGenes ReporterNeoplasmsC-MYCAnimalsHumansTissue DistributionPromoter Regions GeneticGeneGENE-EXPRESSIONRegulation of gene expressionReporter geneOncogeneProteinsCell BiologyTransfectionMolecular biologyPVT1Cell Transformation NeoplasticGene Expression RegulationPVT-1Cell cultureRNA Long NoncodingChromatin immunoprecipitationJournal of Cellular Physiology
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Release of Hypoacetylated and Trimethylated Histone H4 Is an Epigenetic Marker of Early Apoptosis

2006

11 p.-5 fig.-1 fig. supl.

PhysiologyFisiologiaHL-60 CellsApoptosisDNA FragmentationBiologyBiochemistryHistonesHistone H4Jurkat CellsHistone H1HeterochromatinHistone methylationHistone H2AHumansHistone codeCancer epigeneticsMolecular BiologyEpigenomicsApoptosiDNACell BiologyMetabolismeMetabolismHistone methyltransferaseCancer researchBiomarkersJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Gata4 Blocks Somatic Cell Reprogramming By Directly Repressing Nanog

2012

Abstract Somatic cells can be reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells by ectopic expression of the four factors Oct4, Klf4, Sox2, and Myc. Here, we investigated the role of Gata4 in the reprogramming process and present evidence for a negative role of this family of transcription factors in the induction of pluripotency. Coexpression of Gata4 with Oct4, Klf4, and Sox2 with or without Myc in mouse embryonic fibroblasts greatly impaired reprogramming and endogenous Nanog expression. The lack of Nanog upregulation was associated with a blockade in the transition from the initiation phase of reprogramming to the full pluripotent state characteristic of iPS cells. Addition of Nanog …

Pluripotent Stem CellsTranscriptional ActivationHomeobox protein NANOGChromatin ImmunoprecipitationTranscription GeneticRex1Kruppel-Like Transcription FactorsDown-RegulationElectrophoretic Mobility Shift AssayBiologyCell LineProto-Oncogene Proteins c-mycKruppel-Like Factor 4MiceSOX2AnimalsRNA MessengerRNA Small InterferingInduced pluripotent stem cellEmbryonic Stem Cellsreproductive and urinary physiologyHomeodomain ProteinsSOXB1 Transcription FactorsNanog Homeobox ProteinCell DifferentiationNanog Homeobox ProteinCell BiologyCellular ReprogrammingEmbryonic stem cellGATA4 Transcription FactorKLF4embryonic structuresHepatocyte Nuclear Factor 3-betaCancer researchMolecular MedicineRNA Interferencebiological phenomena cell phenomena and immunityOctamer Transcription Factor-3ReprogrammingDevelopmental BiologyStem Cells
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Poly-ADP-Ribose (PAR) as an epigenetic flag

2009

Epigenetics is the study of hereditable chromatin modifications, such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, and nucleosome-remodelling, which occur without alterations to the DNA sequence. The establishment of different epigenetic states in eukaryotes depends on regulatory mechanisms that induce structural changes in chromatin in response to environmental and cellular cues. Two classes of enzymes modulate chromatin accessibility: chromatin-covalent modifiers and ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling complexes. The first class of enzymes catalyzes covalent modifications of DNA as well as the amino- and carboxy-terminal tails of histones, while the second uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis …

Poly Adenosine Diphosphate RiboseCancer ResearchHistone-modifying enzymesEpigenetic regulation of neurogenesisDNA MethylationBiologyChromatin Assembly and DisassemblyChromatin remodelingEpigenesis GeneticChromatinHistonesEpigenetics of physical exerciseBiochemistryHistone methylationAnimalsHumansHistone codePARP epigeneticsPoly(ADP-ribose) PolymerasesMolecular BiologyEpigenomicsEpigenetics
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The nucleosome-remodeling ATPase ISWI is regulated by poly-ADP-ribosylation.

2008

ATP-dependent nucleosome-remodeling enzymes and covalent modifiers of chromatin set the functional state of chromatin. However, how these enzymatic activities are coordinated in the nucleus is largely unknown. We found that the evolutionary conserved nucleosome-remodeling ATPase ISWI and the poly-ADP-ribose polymerase PARP genetically interact. We present evidence showing that ISWI is target of poly-ADP-ribosylation. Poly-ADP-ribosylation counteracts ISWI function in vitro and in vivo. Our work suggests that ISWI is a physiological target of PARP and that poly-ADP-ribosylation can be a new, important post-translational modification regulating the activity of ATP-dependent nucleosome remodel…

Poly Adenosine Diphosphate RiboseImmunoprecipitationQH301-705.5Poly ADP ribose polymeraseATPaseBlotting WesternBiochemistryChromosomesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySettore BIO/10 - BiochimicaAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsImmunoprecipitationNucleosomeBiology (General)Transcription factorIn Situ Hybridization FluorescencePolymeraseAdenosine TriphosphatasesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyGeneral NeuroscienceGenetics and GenomicsPARP ISWI Poly(ADP)ribosylation Chromatin remodellingCell BiologyChromatinISWI PARPNucleosomesChromatinSettore BIO/18 - GeneticaDrosophila melanogasterBiochemistrybiology.proteinPoly(ADP-ribose) PolymerasesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesFunction (biology)Transcription FactorsResearch ArticlePLoS Biology
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NOR regions of polychaete worms of the genus Ophryotrocha studied by chromosome banding techniques and FISH.

2000

This article reports the results of cytogenetic analyses carried out on 10 species of polychaete worms belonging to the genus Ophryotrocha (Dorvilleidae). Nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) were characterized by Ag staining, C-banding, CMA3 staining, and ribosomal fluorescent in situ hybridization (rDNA FISH). Extensive intraspecific variation in NOR number and distribution were observed in O. costlowi, O. sp. macrovifera, O. notoglandulata, O.l. labronica, O. l. pacifica (2n = 6), O. p. puerilis, O. diadema (2n = 8), O. hartmanni, O. gracilis (2n = 10). In O. sp. robusta (2n = 10), Ag-NORs were always located on a single chromosome pair. CMA3 staining suggests a possible trend toward a GC-…

PolychaeteSilver StainingbiologyHeterochromatinZoologyKaryotypePolychaetaAnatomyRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationDNA RibosomalChromosome BandingGenusKaryotypingGeneticsNucleolus Organizer RegionAnimalsNucleolus organizer regionDiademaMolecular BiologyGenome sizeGenetics (clinical)In Situ Hybridization FluorescenceBiotechnologyThe Journal of heredity
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Immunolocalization of Poly ADP-Ribose on Drosophila Polytene Chromosomes

2011

Poly ADP-ribosylation (PARylation) is a posttranslational protein modification catalyzed by poly -ADP-ribose polymerases (PARPs). Poly ADP-ribose metabolism is involved in a wide range of biological processes, such as maintenance of genome stability, transcriptional regulation, energy metabolism, and programed cell death. Recently, chromatin components, including histones, have been shown to be targets of PARylation. Unlike mammals, which have several PARP-encoded genes, the model organism Drosophila melanogaster has only one PARP gene, highly related to mammalian PARP1. These features make flies a great model system to study PARP biology. Commercially available antibodies recognizing this …

Polytene chromosomebiologyved/biologyPoly ADP ribosylationPoly ADP ribose polymeraseved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesbiology.organism_classificationChromatinCell biologyHistonePARP1Melanogasterbiology.proteinDrosophila melanogasterModel organism
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