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  1. Insulator dynamics and the setting of chromatin domains.Geneviève Fourel, Frédérique Magdinier & Éric Gilson - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (5):523-532.
    The early discovery of cis‐regulatory elements able to promote transcription of genes over large distances led to the postulate that elements, termed insulators, should also exist that would limit the action of enhancers, LCRs and silencers to defined domains. Such insulators were indeed found during the past fifteen years in a wide range of organisms, from yeast to humans. Recent advances point to an important role of transcription factors in insulator activity and demonstrate that the operational observation of an insulator (...)
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  • Heterochromatin?many flavours, common themes.Jeffrey M. Craig - 2005 - Bioessays 27 (1):17-28.
    Heterochromatin remains condensed throughout the cell cycle, is generally transcriptionally inert and is built and maintainedbygroupsoffactors witheachgroupmember sharing a similar function. In mammals, these groups include sequence-specific transcriptional repressors, functionalRNAandproteinsinvolvedinDNAandhistone methylation. Heterochromatin is cemented together via interactions within and between each protein group and ismaintainedbythecell’sreplicationmachinery.Itcanbe constitutive (permanent) or facultative (developmentally regulated) and be any size, from a gene promotor to a whole genome. By studying the formation of facultative heterochromatin, we have gained information about how heterochromatin is assembled. We have (...)
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