Regulation of Nuclear Organization and Function
A special issue of Cells (ISSN 2073-4409). This special issue belongs to the section "Cell Nuclei: Function, Transport and Receptors".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 May 2022) | Viewed by 22469
Special Issue Editor
Interests: nuclear envelope; nuclear pore complex; laminopathies; aging; nuclear organization; chromatin structure and function; gene regulation; chromosome segregation; nucleocytoplasmic transport; live microscopy
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Precise regulation of which genes are expressed when and to which level is pivotal to all cellular forms of life. During development from zygote to mature organism, a complex transcriptional program unfolds where genes are activated and silenced in a highly orchestrated manner. Perturbations to gene expression can therefore have dramatic consequences on organismal growth and health. In eukaryotes, gene expression is controlled at multiple levels from the spatial organization of genes within the cell nucleus to nucleosome positioning and access of transcription factors. This Special Issue will cover novel findings on themes concerning nuclear organization and function. This embraces the three-dimensional organization of the genome, including global segregation of eu- and heterochromatin, phase separation, and folding of topologically associated domains and loops that facilitate interactions between regulatory elements of the genome. Access of transcription factors to target genes is often regulated by their nucleocytoplasmic distribution, but is also sensitive to posttranscriptional modifications of histones, which, together with nucleosome positioning, determine the compactness of chromatin. Finally, enrichment or anchoring of particular genes at nuclear features such as the nucleolus, the nuclear lamina, or nuclear pore complexes can have profound effects on their expression as well as DNA replication and repair kinetics. The Special Issue in particular invites contributions that cover advances in single-cell omics and novel multiplex imaging techniques to analyze cell and tissue heterogeneity.
Dr. Peter Askjaer
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Epigenetics
- Euchromatin
- Gene expression
- Heterochromatin
- Imaging
- Nuclear envelope
- Nuclear lamina
- Nuclear pore complex
- Single-cell omics
- Topologically associating domains (TADs)
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Related Special Issues
- Heterochromatin Formation and Function in Cells (10 articles)
- Nuclear Organisation in Cells (12 articles)