Nucleosome displacement in transcription.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Alan P. Wolffe,et al. A positive role for histone acetylation in transcription factor access to nucleosomal DNA , 1993, Cell.
[2] J. Finch,et al. Nucleosomes are assembled by an acidic protein which binds histones and transfers them to DNA , 1978, Nature.
[3] J. Workman,et al. Stimulation of transcription factor binding and histone displacement by nucleosome assembly protein 1 and nucleoplasmin requires disruption of the histone octamer , 1995, Molecular and cellular biology.
[4] Jerry L. Workman,et al. Nucleosome displacement in transcription , 1993, Cell.
[5] D. Luse,et al. Transcription on nucleosomal templates by RNA polymerase II in vitro: inhibition of elongation with enhancement of sequence-specific pausing. , 1991, Genes & development.
[6] R. Kornberg,et al. Nucleosomes inhibit the initiation of transcription but allow chain elongation with the displacement of histones , 1987, Cell.
[7] G. Felsenfeld,et al. A histone octamer can step around a transcribing polymerase without leaving the template , 1994, Cell.
[8] J. Workman,et al. Facilitated binding of GAL4 and heat shock factor to nucleosomal templates: differential function of DNA-binding domains. , 1991, Genes & development.
[9] G. Felsenfeld,et al. A nucleosome core is transferred out of the path of a transcribing polymerase , 1992, Cell.
[10] D. S. Gross,et al. Nuclease hypersensitive sites in chromatin. , 1988, Annual review of biochemistry.
[11] R. Morse. Nucleosome disruption by transcription factor binding in yeast. , 1993, Science.
[12] M. Beato,et al. Hormone induces binding of receptors and transcription factors to a rearranged nucleosome on the MMTV promoter in vivo. , 1995, The EMBO journal.
[13] R. Chalkley,et al. Histone synthesis and deposition in the G1 and S phases of hepatoma tissue culture cells. , 1985, Biochemistry.
[14] J. Workman,et al. Nucleosome cores and histone H1 in the binding of GAL4 derivatives and the reactivation of transcription from nucleosome templates in vitro. , 1993, Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology.
[15] K. Struhl,et al. Distinguishing between mechanisms of eukaryotic transcriptional activation with bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase , 1987, Cell.
[16] Donald D. Brown. The role of stable complexes that repress and activate eucaryotic genes , 1984, Cell.
[17] H. Richard-Foy,et al. The transcriptionally-active MMTV promoter is depleted of histone H1. , 1992, Nucleic acids research.
[18] J. D. Engel,et al. A 200 base pair region at the 5′ end of the chicken adult β-globin gene is accessible to nuclease digestion , 1981, Cell.
[19] H. Yasuda,et al. A protein which facilitates assembly of nucleosome-like structures in vitro in mammalian cells. , 1983, Journal of biochemistry.
[20] R. Kornberg,et al. Irresistible force meets immovable object: Transcription and the nucleosome , 1991, Cell.
[21] J. Workman,et al. Nucleosome core displacement in vitro via a metastable transcription factor-nucleosome complex. , 1992, Science.
[22] Sarah C. R. Elgin,et al. DNAase I-hypersensitive sites of chromatin , 1981, Cell.
[23] M. Osley,et al. Characterization of HIR1 and HIR2, two genes required for regulation of histone gene transcription in Saccharomyces cerevisiae , 1993, Molecular and cellular biology.