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MRC Clinical Sciences Centre Imperial College London, United Kingdom

Chromatin Biochemistry Group

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Research in the Chromatin Biochemistry Group aims to understand how epigenetic information stored in histone and DNA modification signatures that specify functional chromatin elements is translated into biological signals. We employ methods from chemical biology, biochemistry and proteomics, in conjunction with tissue culture and genomic technologies, to study proteins that recognise DNA and histone modification patterns in the context of chromatin. We focus on identifying new factors that integrate information contained in combinations of chromatin modifications on nucleosomes using SILAC-linked nucleosome affinity purifications, and on understanding how these factors operate at the molecular level. We have a particular interest in molecular mechanisms involved in the epigenetic regulation of chromatin during DNA replication and in events that disrupt chromatin integrity during tumour formation.

Lab Members involved in projects related to EpiGeneSys research objectives:

  • Julie Borgel (post-doctoral researcher)
  • Anne Mirabella (PhD student)

 

Latest publications

Divergent Residues Within Histone H3 Dictate a Unique Chromatin Structure in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

26534951 - 2015-11-05
Genetics 2015 Nov 3;
McBurney K, Leung A, Choi JK, Martin BJ, Irwin NA, Bartke T, Nelson CJ, Howe LJ

Chromatin deregulation in disease.

26188466 - 2015-07-21
Chromosoma 2015 Jul 19;
Mirabella AC, Foster BM, Bartke T

The Aurora B Kinase and the Polycomb Protein Ring1B Combine to Regulate Active Promoters in Quiescent Lymphocytes.

24034696 - 2013-09-17
Mol Cell 2013 Sep 12;51(5):647-61
Frangini A, Sjöberg M, Roman-Trufero M, Dharmalingam G, Haberle V, Bartke T, Lenhard B, Malumbres M, Vidal M, Dillon N

View all their publications

News flash

Missing link in epigenetics could explain conundrum of disease inheritance

08-07-2016 - All News

The process by which a mother’s diet during pregnancy can permanently affect her offspring’s attributes, such as weight, could be strongly influenced by genetic variation in an unexpected part of...

Epigenetic switch for obesity

08-02-2016 - All News

Obesity can sometimes be shut down It is well known that a predisposition to adiposity lies in our genes. A new study by researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology...