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From Gene Repression to the Maintenance of Facultative Heterochromatin: A Molecular Basis

thesis
posted on 2024-07-31, 02:10 authored by MELANIE MURRAY
Repressive histone methyltransferases maintain genes in a repressed state and are required for the normal development of metazoan species. Previous evidence suggested that repressive transcription factors bind to repressive histone methyltransferases to recruit them to chromatin, but such interactions could not be detected here. Instead, physical interactions were mapped between other chromatin-associated factors and histone methyltransferases using various biophysical approaches. Additionally, using reconstituted systems and in vitro enzymatic assays, this thesis highlights how regulatory factors affect the chromatin-modification activity of repressive histone methyltransferase. Overall, this thesis provides insights into multifactorial mechanisms responsible for maintaining the repressed state of genes.

History

Principal supervisor

Qi Zhang

Additional supervisor 1

Chen Davidovich

Year of Award

2024

Department, School or Centre

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Campus location

Australia

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences

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    Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Theses

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