Team:UCSF/Synthetic Chromatin Design

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     <h2 align="justify">The Yeast Native System</h2>
     <h2 align="justify">The Yeast Native System</h2>
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     <p align="justify">Heterochromatin acts in a regional manner, spreading from a point of initiation outward. The specifics of heterochromatin (e.g. histone tail mark, binding proteins etc.) varies by organism, but there seems to be a conserved general mode of spreading. First, a histone modifier (pink half circle) is recruited to a site of initiation, where it makes local histone tail modifications. These modified tails serve as sites of recruitment for binding proteins (yellow hexagons) which then recruit more histone modifiers. Thus, positive feedback at the level of histone tail modification propagates silencing outward. In S. cerevisiae, the histone modifier is Sir2 (Silent Information Regulator 2), a histone de-acetylase that primarily targets H4K16. This mark is bound by Sir3 and Sir4, which then recruit more Sir2. </p>
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     <p align="justify">The specifics of heterochromatin (e.g. histone tail mark, binding proteins etc.) varies by organism, but there seems to be a conserved general mode of spreading. First, a histone modifier (pink half circle) is recruited to a site of initiation, where it makes local histone tail modifications. These modified tails serve as sites of recruitment for binding proteins (yellow hexagons) which then recruit more histone modifiers. Thus, positive feedback at the level of histone tail modification propagates silencing outward. In S. cerevisiae, the histone modifier is Sir2 (Silent Information Regulator 2), a histone de-acetylase that primarily targets H4K16. This mark is bound by Sir3 and Sir4, which then recruit more Sir2. </p>
     <p align="center"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2008/b/bc/Native_System.png" width="450" height="450" /></p>
     <p align="center"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2008/b/bc/Native_System.png" width="450" height="450" /></p>
     <p align="justify"></p>
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Revision as of 23:23, 28 October 2008

Untitled Document

Synthetic Chromatin Bit

 

The Yeast Native System

The specifics of heterochromatin (e.g. histone tail mark, binding proteins etc.) varies by organism, but there seems to be a conserved general mode of spreading. First, a histone modifier (pink half circle) is recruited to a site of initiation, where it makes local histone tail modifications. These modified tails serve as sites of recruitment for binding proteins (yellow hexagons) which then recruit more histone modifiers. Thus, positive feedback at the level of histone tail modification propagates silencing outward. In S. cerevisiae, the histone modifier is Sir2 (Silent Information Regulator 2), a histone de-acetylase that primarily targets H4K16. This mark is bound by Sir3 and Sir4, which then recruit more Sir2.





Design of our Yeast Synthetic Chromatin System

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