The genome must be highly compacted to fit within eukaryotic nuclei but must be accessible to the transcriptional machinery to allow appropriate expression of genes in different cell types and throughout developmental pathways. A growing body of work has shown that the genome, analogously to proteins, forms an ordered, hierarchical structure that closely correlates and may even be causally linked with regulation of functions such as transcription. This review describes our current understanding of how these functional genomic “secondary and tertiary structures” form a blueprint for global nuclear architecture and the potential they hold for understanding and manipulating genomic regulation
Translating the vast amounts of genomic and epigenomic information accumulated on the linear genome ...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that chromosomes in a range of organisms are compartmentalized in ...
Genomes are more than linear sequences. In vivo they exist as elaborate physical structures, and the...
The genome must be highly compacted to fit within eukaryotic nuclei but must be accessible to the tr...
With the sequence of the human genome now complete, studies must focus on how the genome is function...
The nuclear organization of chromosomes has been suggested to be associated with regulation of gene ...
AbstractThe manner by which eukaryotic genomes are packaged into nuclei while maintaining crucial nu...
Higher eukaryotic genomes contain both housekeeping genes and genes of which the expression is restr...
The human genome is incredibly big - over two meters long. It must fold up to fit inside the nucleus...
Genome-wide molecular studies have provided new insights into the organization of nuclear chromatin ...
The nuclear organization of chromosomes has been suggested to be associated with regulation of gene ...
AbstractEukaryotic cells store their genome inside a nucleus, a dedicated organelle shielded by a do...
It has been known for over a century that chromatin is not randomly distributed within the nucleus. ...
We review recent developments in mapping chromosomal contacts and compare emerging insights on chrom...
Deep insight on Spatial arrangement of the human genome and its possible functional role
Translating the vast amounts of genomic and epigenomic information accumulated on the linear genome ...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that chromosomes in a range of organisms are compartmentalized in ...
Genomes are more than linear sequences. In vivo they exist as elaborate physical structures, and the...
The genome must be highly compacted to fit within eukaryotic nuclei but must be accessible to the tr...
With the sequence of the human genome now complete, studies must focus on how the genome is function...
The nuclear organization of chromosomes has been suggested to be associated with regulation of gene ...
AbstractThe manner by which eukaryotic genomes are packaged into nuclei while maintaining crucial nu...
Higher eukaryotic genomes contain both housekeeping genes and genes of which the expression is restr...
The human genome is incredibly big - over two meters long. It must fold up to fit inside the nucleus...
Genome-wide molecular studies have provided new insights into the organization of nuclear chromatin ...
The nuclear organization of chromosomes has been suggested to be associated with regulation of gene ...
AbstractEukaryotic cells store their genome inside a nucleus, a dedicated organelle shielded by a do...
It has been known for over a century that chromatin is not randomly distributed within the nucleus. ...
We review recent developments in mapping chromosomal contacts and compare emerging insights on chrom...
Deep insight on Spatial arrangement of the human genome and its possible functional role
Translating the vast amounts of genomic and epigenomic information accumulated on the linear genome ...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that chromosomes in a range of organisms are compartmentalized in ...
Genomes are more than linear sequences. In vivo they exist as elaborate physical structures, and the...