HIGHLIGHTS
- who: January and colleagues from the Nanjing Medical University, China have published the article: The MOZ-BRPF1 acetyltransferase complex in epigenetic crosstalk linked to gene regulation, development, and human diseases, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Nowadays epigenetics plays a central role in many types of diseases, including cardiovascular diseases, neurological diseases, metabolic disorders and cancer.
- future: Although these two histone marks are chemically similar and linked with active transcription (Sabari et_al 2017) further studies are needed to address the role of them during development. Studies showed that these two complexes indeed have opposing . . .
If you want to have access to all the content you need to log in!
Thanks :)
If you don't have an account, you can create one here.