Chromosomal regions can adopt stable and heritable alternative states resulting in bistable gene expression without changes to the DNA sequence. Such epigenetic control is often associated with alternative covalent modifications of histones. The stability and heritability of the states are thought to involve positive feedback where modified nucleosomes recruit enzymes that similarly modify nearby nucleosomes. We developed a simplified stochastic model for dynamic nucleosome modification based on the silent mating-type region of the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We show that the mechanism can give strong bistability that is resistant both to high noise due to random gain or loss of nucleosome modifications and to random partitioning upon ...
Eukaryotes must pack their DNA into the nucleus tightly, yet accessibly. To accomplish this, the nuc...
Combinatorial effects of epigenetic modifications on transcription activity have been proposed as “h...
Nucleosome positioning in the genome is essential for the regulation of many nuclear processes. We c...
SummaryChromosomal regions can adopt stable and heritable alternative states resulting in bistable g...
Nucleosomes can be covalently modified by addition of various chemical groups on several of their ex...
Positive feedback in nucleosome modification has been proposed to allow large chromatin regions to e...
Cells can often choose among several stably heritable phenotypes. Examples are the expressions of ge...
<p>(A) A simple modification scheme previously shown to be capable of giving heritable bistability <...
Background: The activity of a single gene is influenced by the composition of the chromatin in which...
BACKGROUND: The activity of a single gene is influenced by the composition of the chromatin in which...
A core assumption in chromatin biology is that nucleosomes store and transmit epigenetic memory of g...
How alternative chromatin-based regulatory states can be made stable and heritable in order to provi...
Background: Eukaryotic genomes are packaged into chromatin, a compact structure containing fundament...
The human genome consists of over 3 billion nucleotides and would be around 2 meters long if uncoile...
AbstractCurrent models for epigenetic gene silencing envision a static relationship between histone ...
Eukaryotes must pack their DNA into the nucleus tightly, yet accessibly. To accomplish this, the nuc...
Combinatorial effects of epigenetic modifications on transcription activity have been proposed as “h...
Nucleosome positioning in the genome is essential for the regulation of many nuclear processes. We c...
SummaryChromosomal regions can adopt stable and heritable alternative states resulting in bistable g...
Nucleosomes can be covalently modified by addition of various chemical groups on several of their ex...
Positive feedback in nucleosome modification has been proposed to allow large chromatin regions to e...
Cells can often choose among several stably heritable phenotypes. Examples are the expressions of ge...
<p>(A) A simple modification scheme previously shown to be capable of giving heritable bistability <...
Background: The activity of a single gene is influenced by the composition of the chromatin in which...
BACKGROUND: The activity of a single gene is influenced by the composition of the chromatin in which...
A core assumption in chromatin biology is that nucleosomes store and transmit epigenetic memory of g...
How alternative chromatin-based regulatory states can be made stable and heritable in order to provi...
Background: Eukaryotic genomes are packaged into chromatin, a compact structure containing fundament...
The human genome consists of over 3 billion nucleotides and would be around 2 meters long if uncoile...
AbstractCurrent models for epigenetic gene silencing envision a static relationship between histone ...
Eukaryotes must pack their DNA into the nucleus tightly, yet accessibly. To accomplish this, the nuc...
Combinatorial effects of epigenetic modifications on transcription activity have been proposed as “h...
Nucleosome positioning in the genome is essential for the regulation of many nuclear processes. We c...