Background: Chromatin architectural proteins interact with nucleosomes to modulate chromatin accessibility and higher-order chromatin structure. While these proteins are almost certainly important for gene regulation they have been studied far less than the core histone proteins. Results: Here we describe the genomic distributions and functional roles of two chromatin architectural proteins: histone H1 and the high mobility group protein HMGD1 in Drosophila S2 cells. Using ChIP-seq, biochemical and gene specific approaches, we find that HMGD1 binds to highly accessible regulatory chromatin and active promoters. In contrast, H1 is primarily associated with heterochromatic regions marked with repressive histone marks. We find that the ratio o...
An organism’s genome stores its unique, hereditary information in the form of DNA. Sequences of DNA ...
Histone H1 is involved in the regulation of chromatin higher-order structure and compaction. In huma...
The expression of genetic information is tightly controlled by chromatin regulatory proteins, includ...
BACKGROUND: Chromatin architectural proteins interact with nucleosomes to modulate chromatin accessi...
© 2016 Panday and Grove. Background: Eukaryotic chromatin consists of nucleosome core particles conn...
Heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1a in Drosophila) is a conserved eukaryotic chromosomal protein that is...
Histone H1 and HMGB1 (high-mobility group protein B1) are the most abundant chromosomal proteins apa...
Chromatin structure plays a key role in regulating gene expression and embryonic differentiation; ho...
The heterochromatin-enriched HP1 proteins play a critical role in regulation of transcription. These...
Chromatin architectural proteins (CAPs) bind the entry/exit DNA of nucleosomes and linker DNA to for...
It is now clearly established that the central regulator of eukaryotic gene transcription is the org...
Background: Linker histone H1 is a core chromatin component that binds to nucleosome core particles ...
The high mobility group (HMG) proteins are the most abundant non-histone chromosomal proteins within...
Chromatin is a mixture of DNA and DNA binding proteins that control transcription. Dynamic chromatin...
Double chromodomains occur in CHD proteins, which are ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling factors imp...
An organism’s genome stores its unique, hereditary information in the form of DNA. Sequences of DNA ...
Histone H1 is involved in the regulation of chromatin higher-order structure and compaction. In huma...
The expression of genetic information is tightly controlled by chromatin regulatory proteins, includ...
BACKGROUND: Chromatin architectural proteins interact with nucleosomes to modulate chromatin accessi...
© 2016 Panday and Grove. Background: Eukaryotic chromatin consists of nucleosome core particles conn...
Heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1a in Drosophila) is a conserved eukaryotic chromosomal protein that is...
Histone H1 and HMGB1 (high-mobility group protein B1) are the most abundant chromosomal proteins apa...
Chromatin structure plays a key role in regulating gene expression and embryonic differentiation; ho...
The heterochromatin-enriched HP1 proteins play a critical role in regulation of transcription. These...
Chromatin architectural proteins (CAPs) bind the entry/exit DNA of nucleosomes and linker DNA to for...
It is now clearly established that the central regulator of eukaryotic gene transcription is the org...
Background: Linker histone H1 is a core chromatin component that binds to nucleosome core particles ...
The high mobility group (HMG) proteins are the most abundant non-histone chromosomal proteins within...
Chromatin is a mixture of DNA and DNA binding proteins that control transcription. Dynamic chromatin...
Double chromodomains occur in CHD proteins, which are ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling factors imp...
An organism’s genome stores its unique, hereditary information in the form of DNA. Sequences of DNA ...
Histone H1 is involved in the regulation of chromatin higher-order structure and compaction. In huma...
The expression of genetic information is tightly controlled by chromatin regulatory proteins, includ...