Reuniting the contrasting functions of H2A.ZThis paper is one of a selection of papers published in this Special Issue, entitled 27th International West Coast Chromatin and Chromosome Conference, and has undergone the Journal's usual peer review process.

2006 Biochemistry and Cell Biology 103 citations

Abstract

It is now well established that cells modify chromatin to set transcriptionally active or inactive regions. Such control of chromatin structure is essential for proper development of organisms. In addition to the growing number of histone post-translational modifications, cells can exchange canonical histones with different variants that can directly or indirectly change chromatin structure. Moreover, enzymatic complexes that can exchange specific histone variants within the nucleosome have now been identified. One such variant, H2A.Z, has recently been the focus of many studies. H2A.Z is highly conserved in evolution and has many different functions, while defining both active and inactive chromatin in different contexts. Advanced molecular techniques, such as genome-wide binding assays (chromatin immunoprecipitation on chip) have recently given researchers many clues as to how H2A.Z is targeted to chromatin and how it affects nuclear functions. We wish to review the recent literature and summarize our understanding of the mechanisms and functions of H2A.Z.

Keywords

ChromatinHistoneChromatin immunoprecipitationBiologyHistone-modifying enzymesChIA-PETComputational biologyNucleosomeChromosomeGeneticsChromatin remodelingEvolutionary biologyCell biologyDNAGeneGene expression

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Year
2006
Type
review
Volume
84
Issue
4
Pages
528-535
Citations
103
Access
Closed

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Benoît Guillemette, Luc Gaudreau (2006). Reuniting the contrasting functions of H2A.ZThis paper is one of a selection of papers published in this Special Issue, entitled 27th International West Coast Chromatin and Chromosome Conference, and has undergone the Journal's usual peer review process.. Biochemistry and Cell Biology , 84 (4) , 528-535. https://doi.org/10.1139/o06-077

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DOI
10.1139/o06-077