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1 quantitative information needed to determine chromatin organization.
2 nd illuminated several interrelated roles in chromatin organization.
3 ociating Domains (TADs) that represent a sub-chromatin organization.
4 bodies while retaining the role of MeCP2 in chromatin organization.
5 silencing and maintenance of siRNA-dependent chromatin organization.
6 ing RNA biogenesis and, consequently, global chromatin organization.
7 stent with their ascribed role in regulating chromatin organization.
8 e trajectories are used to explore the local chromatin organization.
9 ispensable for the formation of higher order chromatin organization.
10 role in chromatin compaction and large-scale chromatin organization.
11 enable kinetochore assembly and centromeric chromatin organization.
12 es, respectively, does not alter genome-wide chromatin organization.
13 in interface influence both NE structure and chromatin organization.
14 nking transcription regulatory potential and chromatin organization.
15 ur mutations in enzymes that are involved in chromatin organization.
16 identifying SMARCA4 as a novel component of chromatin organization.
17 suggesting an inherent structural memory in chromatin organization.
18 hypothesized to control gene expression and chromatin organization.
19 lating to transcription, DNA replication and chromatin organization.
20 In eukaryotes, gene expression depends on chromatin organization.
21 DNA binding, cell cycle, differentiation and chromatin organization.
22 ally related to biological processes such as chromatin organization.
23 egation (PEV), suggesting that it influences chromatin organization.
24 ding factors, such as replication timing and chromatin organization.
25 e nuclear lamina regulates proliferation and chromatin organization.
26 rovide a useful guide for the exploration of chromatin organization.
27 hlight fundamental principles of single-cell chromatin organization.
28 lates with reduced RNA synthesis and altered chromatin organization.
29 onal links between transcriptome control and chromatin organization.
30 tic environment and ultimately restructuring chromatin organization.
31 ification regulating nucleosome dynamics and chromatin organization.
32 (tRNA) genes, which have been implicated in chromatin organization.
33 ual roles in nucleocytoplasmic transport and chromatin organization.
34 regulation, chromatin state and higher order chromatin organization.
35 , impact on gene expression, and the role of chromatin organization.
36 enetically inheritable nature of centromeric chromatin organization.
37 ge-specific regulators as well as changes in chromatin organization.
38 role of Nup157, and its paralogue Nup170, in chromatin organization.
39 les in the regulation of gene expression and chromatin organization.
40 ts into an additional layer of complexity in chromatin organization.
41 this process dramatically changed interphase chromatin organization.
42 genome-wide, three-dimensional (3D) view of chromatin organization.
43 To understand this mistargeting, we examined chromatin organization.
44 ding replication, repair, transcription, and chromatin organization.
45 studies on the influence of DNA sequence on chromatin organization.
46 p extrusion is a viable general mechanism of chromatin organization.
47 HiChIP is a powerful tool to interrogate 3D chromatin organization.
48 to determine its contribution to interphase chromatin organization.
49 ceted role in gene expression regulation and chromatin organization.
50 i-faceted picture and physical principles of chromatin organization.
51 n vivo, affecting nuclear histone levels and chromatin organization.
52 e central players in this cell type-specific chromatin organization.
53 urons in the mouse eye and nose have unusual chromatin organization.
54 ave enabled new views into several layers of chromatin organization.
55 ntal changes by regulating transcription and chromatin organization.
56 well as cell-type-independent principles of chromatin organization.
57 one-protamine exchange, sperm maturation and chromatin organization.
58 effects via self-reconstruction of disrupted chromatin organization.
59 yltransferase and defines the role of 6mA in chromatin organization.
60 ivation or knockdown, implying changes in ES chromatin organization.
62 ntext of promoter-proximal pausing and local chromatin organization, 5' and 3' ends of nascent capped
65 report an imaging technology for visualizing chromatin organization across multiple scales in single
67 irus insertional mutagenesis whereby spatial chromatin organization allows distally located provirus,
73 mina composition underlie cell-type-specific chromatin organization and cell fate, suggesting that th
74 EL) and two significantly enriched pathways (chromatin organization and cellular stress response) sug
75 d we will discuss how epigenetic regulation, chromatin organization and circuit dynamics may contribu
76 cal roles for the AT-hook domain of MeCP2 in chromatin organization and clinical features of Rett syn
77 trotransposon families play a direct role in chromatin organization and developmental progression.
78 ngle-nucleus methyl-3C sequencing to capture chromatin organization and DNA methylation information a
82 nection between the pluripotency network and chromatin organization and emphasize that maintaining an
84 linked to long-range changes in higher-order chromatin organization and epigenetic dysregulation in c
86 Journal has inspired current research on how chromatin organization and epigenetics impact regulation
87 neous characterization of cell-type-specific chromatin organization and epigenome in complex tissues.
88 Despite their fundamental implications for chromatin organization and function, these opposing view
91 of SMARCA4-dependent changes in higher-order chromatin organization and gene expression, identifying
95 mphocyte involves rapid and major changes in chromatin organization and gene expression; however, the
96 protein CTCF, which functions in genome-wide chromatin organization and gene regulation, is recruited
102 tin has provided detailed insight into local chromatin organization and has set the stage for recent
103 e known to be a major factor that influences chromatin organization and hence gene expression in the
104 ne and non-histone protein complexes defines chromatin organization and hence regulates numerous nucl
106 ear basket nucleoporins (Tpr and Nup153) and chromatin organization and how altering the host environ
107 role of combinatorial readout in maintaining chromatin organization and in enforcing the transcriptio
108 s allows the investigation of spatiotemporal chromatin organization and its role in gene regulation a
109 nsmitted into the nucleus, where they affect chromatin organization and mechanoresponsive signaling m
110 hought to be important for processes such as chromatin organization and modulation of gene expression
112 ic tensile loading (DL) regulates changes in chromatin organization and nuclear mechanics in MSCs.
113 epigenomics, although the role of k-mers in chromatin organization and nucleosome positioning is par
117 ing of oncogenic mechanisms at each level of chromatin organization and regulation, and discuss new s
119 ding cells had abnormal nuclear envelope and chromatin organization and severe defects in postembryon
120 gene expression model impairment of spatial chromatin organization and signaling pathways as underly
122 iosis occurs amid global reprogramming of 3D chromatin organization and that strengthening of chromat
123 difications is sensitive to heterogeneity in chromatin organization and the resulting variability in
124 tes PRDM15 depletion, both in terms of local chromatin organization and the transcriptional modulatio
126 ST/EiJ and C57BL/6J mice have very different chromatin organization and transcription profiles in the
127 processes including cell fate commitment, 3D chromatin organization and transcription regulation.
128 some assembly pathway, leading to changes in chromatin organization and transcription, remains unknow
129 CHD1, and ISW2 nucleosome spacing enzymes in chromatin organization and transcription, using isogenic
133 ciples that capture the relationship between chromatin organization and transcriptional regulation.
134 been shown to function in signaling events, chromatin organization and transcriptional regulation.
137 nal roles of NPCs and Nups in transcription, chromatin organization, and epigenetic gene regulation i
138 modelin" that improved nuclear architecture, chromatin organization, and fitness of both human lamin
140 mportant role for NE81 in nuclear integrity, chromatin organization, and mechanical stability of cell
141 DNA binding protein involved in higher-order chromatin organization, and mutations in the human CTCF
142 their transcription start site (TSS) usage, chromatin organization, and posttranscriptional conseque
144 opment that controls stem cell self-renewal, chromatin organization, and the DNA damage response, act
145 in large genomic segments reflecting spatial chromatin organization, and the magnitude of these effec
146 ach protein introduces a unique phenotype to chromatin organization, and these structures are put int
148 The contributions of these remodelers to chromatin organization are largely combinatorial, distin
152 ces of loss of these factors on higher-order chromatin organization, as well as the transcriptome.
153 n A and C cause misshapen nuclei and altered chromatin organization associated with cancer and lamino
154 Cancer cells exhibit dramatic alterations of chromatin organization at cis-regulatory elements, but t
155 olution, and uncovered general principles of chromatin organization at different types of genomic fea
156 ts genomic targets, and perturbed high-order chromatin organization at key genes involved in heart de
157 recognition is required by ISW1a for proper chromatin organization at promoters; as well as transcri
159 hanges result in establishment of a specific chromatin organization at the RSS that facilitates acces
161 re, and recent data have characterized their chromatin organization at very different scales, from su
163 a polymer model, that accounts for the local chromatin organization before and after a double-strande
165 ing domains (TADs) as a conserved feature of chromatin organization, but how TADs are spatially organ
166 have been implicated in maintaining an open chromatin organization, but how these processes are conn
167 results reveal a novel function of SIRT7 on chromatin organization by mediating the anchoring of L1
168 omain proteins influence gene expression and chromatin organization by way of histone demethylation,
169 hylation channels and show that higher-order chromatin organization can be predicted from their infor
172 We show that the highly compartmentalized 3D chromatin organization characteristic of interphase nucl
173 eq data to predict two important features of chromatin organization: chromatin interaction hubs and t
174 brane-chromatin interactions impairs mitotic chromatin organization, chromosome segregation and cytok
175 ence that variations in different aspects of chromatin organization collectively define gene expressi
176 ved from multiple tissues, consistent with a chromatin organization common to epithelial cell lines.
177 ome arrays, highlighting a key difference in chromatin organization compared to model organisms.
181 In the latter, pore clustering resulted in chromatin organization defects and led to a significant
182 r data uncover how IBPs dynamically regulate chromatin organization depending on distinct cofactors.
183 he unique contributions by SA1 and SA2 to 3D chromatin organization, DNA replication fork progression
185 ) approach, we examined the reprogramming of chromatin organization during early development in mice.
187 t in regulating DNA methylation dynamics and chromatin organization during early heart development.
189 east cancer tissues, changes in higher-order chromatin organization during tumorigenesis have not bee
190 key mechanosensor and can directly influence chromatin organization, epigenetic modifications, and ge
191 clin loci, indicating a disruption to normal chromatin organization essential to life-cycle progressi
192 dels, this dynamic plasticity of large-scale chromatin organization explains how localized changes in
193 rces to the nucleus, resulting in changes to chromatin organization, followed by nuclear deformation.
197 view current knowledge of the main levels of chromatin organization, from the scale of nucleosomes to
198 uild the nuclear lamina and are required for chromatin organization, gene expression, cell cycle prog
199 skeletal organization, mechanical stability, chromatin organization, gene regulation, genome stabilit
200 concerted alterations in the expression of "chromatin organization" genes and inferred that TBT-disr
202 e, we summarize the current principles of 3D chromatin organization, how the integrity of the 3D geno
203 find that the naturally occurring changes in chromatin organization impart a regulation on the spatia
205 periments provide partial information on the chromatin organization in a cell population, namely the
206 antitative understanding of lamin-associated chromatin organization in a crowded macromolecular envir
207 mpact on the molecular and spatial (nuclear) chromatin organization in Arabidopsis with distinct role
208 les including NE reassembly, cell cycle, and chromatin organization in cells, and subtly alters its n
211 critical roles of nucleosome positioning and chromatin organization in gene regulation during reprogr
214 nology, which provides an integrated view of chromatin organization in its native structural and func
215 Here, we perform Hi-C analysis to examine 3D chromatin organization in male germ cells during spermat
217 ding the powerful role played by large-scale chromatin organization in normal and aberrant lineage-sp
219 indings reveal a dual role of CTCF-dependent chromatin organization in promoting myelinogenic program
226 tor impaired nerve regeneration, implicating chromatin organization in the regenerative competence.
229 l, we demonstrated the distinct higher-order chromatin organization in the two nuclei of the T. therm
231 so function in mitochondrial respiration and chromatin organization in ways that may not involve tran
233 either act as E3 ubiquitin ligase or affect chromatin organization, inhibits the transcriptional act
234 sregulated gene expression due to changes in chromatin organization into active and inactive compartm
235 , we investigate cell-to-cell variability of chromatin organization into topologically associating do
238 nexpectedly, the subsequent establishment of chromatin organization is a prolonged process that exten
239 Genome-wide mapping of three dimensional chromatin organization is an important yet technically c
243 ed when the replication fork passes, but how chromatin organization is re-established following repli
246 is known in molecular detail of centromeric chromatin organization, its propagation through cell div
248 ggest the novel possibility that H1-mediated chromatin organization may contribute to the epigenetic
249 n in vivo study of how genetic variation and chromatin organization may dictate susceptibility to DNA
250 ation" genes and inferred that TBT-disrupted chromatin organization might be able to self-reconstruct
251 as an input to an energy landscape model for chromatin organization [Minimal Chromatin Model (MiChroM
252 ific roles in transcriptional regulation and chromatin organization need further characterization.
254 ity of our approach to deliver insights into chromatin organization of great biological relevance.
257 is therefore well-suited to characterize the chromatin organization of single cells in heterogeneous
258 ssion, conceivably by mediating higher-order chromatin organization of subtelomeres and Tf2 elements,
261 deletion within the Ifng-as1 locus disrupted chromatin organization of the extended Ifng locus, impai
264 Our results demonstrate that the global chromatin organization of zygote nuclei is fundamentally
267 eukaryotic protein production, histone-based chromatin organization paved the path to eukaryotic geno
268 ecently, the influence of telomere length on chromatin organization prior to senescence has revealed
269 should shed light on the relationships among chromatin organization, protein-DNA interactions, and ge
275 fectors include regulators of transcription, chromatin organization, RNA processing, and translation,
276 altering the expression of genes involved in chromatin organization, signaling, adhesion, motility, d
277 ever, most of published genome-wide unbiased chromatin organization studies have used cultured cell l
279 gions of DNA, thereby mediating higher order chromatin organization that is critical for sister chrom
280 ity, consistent with higher-order changes in chromatin organization that mark (1) the beginning of re
281 s share a deeply evolutionarily conserved 3D chromatin organization that predates the Cambrian explos
282 n were predisposed to obesity due to altered chromatin organization that subsequently biased DNA meth
283 d positioning of gene loci and regulation of chromatin organization through protein complexes and non
284 r self-renewal and that it acts with HIRA in chromatin organization to link epigenetic organization t
286 e contribution of human subtelomeric DNA and chromatin organization to telomere integrity and chromos
287 volved in many nuclear activities, including chromatin organization, transcription and replication.
288 ds of proteins involved in processes such as chromatin organization, transcription, DNA repair, macro
289 ending the nuclear envelope and required for chromatin organization, transcriptional regulation and m
290 at ancestral TBT exposure induces changes in chromatin organization transmissible through meiosis and
291 igger nuclear actin-dependent alterations in chromatin organization, uncovering a general cellular me
293 ors investigate changes to transcription and chromatin organization upon stress and find that activat
294 believed to be a crucial player in bacterial chromatin organization via its DNA-bridging activity.
295 hain locus V(D)J recombination requires a 3D chromatin organization which permits widely distributed
296 combination (NAHR) are more prone to disrupt chromatin organization while processed pseudogenes can c
297 ok an independent and orthogonal analysis of chromatin organization with mouse pressure-overload mode
299 asets provide insights into high-dimensional chromatin organization, yet introduce new computational
300 t structural and functional components of 3D chromatin organization, yet the relationship between the