SummaryMisregulated transcription is linked to many human diseases, and thus artificial transcriptional activators are highly desirable as mechanistic tools and as replacements for their malfunctioning natural counterparts. We previously reported two artificial transcriptional activation domains obtained from synthetic peptide libraries screened for binding to the yeast transcription protein Med15(Gal11). Here we demonstrate that the transcriptional potency of the Med15 ligands is increased through straightforward structural alterations. These artificial activation domains upregulate transcription via specific Med15 binding interactions and do not function in mammalian cells, which lack Med15. This functional specificity stands in contrast ...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
SummaryMisregulated transcription is linked to many human diseases, and thus artificial transcriptio...
In this issue, Mapp and colleagues describe a significant advance in the design of artificial transc...
Eukaryotic transcriptional activators are minimally comprised of a DNA binding domain and a separabl...
AbstractBackground: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one f...
Background: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one for DNA b...
Background: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one for DNA b...
AbstractSynthetic activators that mimic the ability of native transcription factors to recruit the R...
Both genetic and biochemical data suggest that transcriptional activators with little sequence homol...
The regulation of transcription levels of specific genes is one of the fundamental processes that un...
The regulation of transcription levels of specific genes is one of the fundamental processes that un...
Transcription is important for the determination of cellular phenotype through the regulation of gen...
AbstractFrom random RNA libraries expressed in yeast, we evolved RNA-based transcriptional activator...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
SummaryMisregulated transcription is linked to many human diseases, and thus artificial transcriptio...
In this issue, Mapp and colleagues describe a significant advance in the design of artificial transc...
Eukaryotic transcriptional activators are minimally comprised of a DNA binding domain and a separabl...
AbstractBackground: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one f...
Background: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one for DNA b...
Background: Most transcriptional activators minimally comprise two functional modules, one for DNA b...
AbstractSynthetic activators that mimic the ability of native transcription factors to recruit the R...
Both genetic and biochemical data suggest that transcriptional activators with little sequence homol...
The regulation of transcription levels of specific genes is one of the fundamental processes that un...
The regulation of transcription levels of specific genes is one of the fundamental processes that un...
Transcription is important for the determination of cellular phenotype through the regulation of gen...
AbstractFrom random RNA libraries expressed in yeast, we evolved RNA-based transcriptional activator...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...
The link between a growing number of human diseases and misregulation of gene expression has spurred...