Publications by authors named "Colin Kunze"

Article Synopsis
  • Epigenetic mechanisms allow cells to change and adapt without changing their DNA.
  • Scientists studied fission yeast to see how these changes happen and found that certain proteins can shift over time to help cells adapt to stress.
  • When the stress is gone, cells remember how to respond better in the future, which could help us understand things like drug resistance and illnesses.
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A classical and well-established mechanism that enables cells to adapt to new and adverse conditions is the acquisition of beneficial genetic mutations. Much less is known about epigenetic mechanisms that allow cells to develop novel and adaptive phenotypes without altering their genetic blueprint. It has been recently proposed that histone modifications, such as heterochromatin-defining H3K9 methylation (H3K9me), normally reserved to maintain genome integrity, can be redistributed across the genome to establish new and potentially adaptive phenotypes.

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A synthetic gene circuit enables programming of many stable states in mammalian cells.

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Antibiotic resistance is generally associated with a fitness deficit resulting from the burden of producing and maintaining resistance machinery. This additional cost suggests that resistant bacteria will be outcompeted by susceptible bacteria in conditions without antibiotics. However, in practice, this process is slow in part because of regulation that minimizes expression of these genes in the absence of antibiotics.

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