The INhibitor of Growth (ING) family of type II tumour suppressors are encoded by five genes in mammals (ING1–ING5), most of which encode multiple isoforms via splicing, and all of …
M Ullah, N Pelletier, L Xiao, SP Zhao… - … and cellular biology, 2008 - Am Soc Microbiol
The monocytic leukemia zinc finger protein MOZ and the related factor MORF form tetrameric complexes with ING5 (inhibitor of growth 5), EAF6 (Esa1-associated factor 6 …
RE Mansfield, CA Musselman, AH Kwan… - Journal of Biological …, 2011 - ASBMB
A major challenge in chromatin biology is to understand the mechanisms by which chromatin is remodeled into active or inactive states as required during development and …
T Hung, O Binda, KS Champagne, AJ Kuo, K Johnson… - Molecular cell, 2009 - cell.com
Aberrations in chromatin dynamics play a fundamental role in tumorigenesis, yet relatively little is known of the molecular mechanisms linking histone lysine methylation to neoplastic …
Q Guo, W Fast - Journal of biological chemistry, 2011 - ASBMB
Gene expression is regulated by a number of interrelated posttranslational modifications of histones, including citrullination. For example, peptidylarginine deminase 4 (PAD4) converts …
Y Qiu, L Liu, C Zhao, C Han, F Li, J Zhang… - Genes & …, 2012 - genesdev.cshlp.org
Histone acetylation is a hallmark for gene transcription. As a histone acetyltransferase, MOZ (monocytic leukemia zinc finger protein) is important for HOX gene expression as well as …
KL Yap, MM Zhou - Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular …, 2010 - Taylor & Francis
Epigenetic regulation of gene transcription relies on an array of recurring structural domains that have evolved to recognize post-translational modifications on histones. The roles of …
KS Champagne, TG Kutateladze - Current drug targets, 2009 - ingentaconnect.com
The Inhibitor of Growth (ING) tumor suppressors are implicated in oncogenesis, control of DNA damage repair, cellular senescence and apoptosis. All members of the ING family …
S Nozell, T Laver, D Moseley… - … and cellular biology, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
The NF-κB family mediates immune and inflammatory responses. In many cancers, NF-κB is constitutively activated and induces the expression of genes that facilitate tumorigenesis …