Publications by authors named "Natalie L Downer"

Article Synopsis
  • A high-throughput screening aimed at finding new inhibitors for the KAT6A enzyme led to the identification of CTX-0124143, an aryl acylsulfonohydrazide with an inhibitory concentration (IC) of 1.0 μM.
  • Further structure-activity relationship studies resulted in advanced compounds that improved upon the previously reported lead, WM-8014, offering similar inhibition potency with better stability and reduced lipophilicity.
  • A notable outcome of this research was the discovery of WM-1119, a highly potent KAT6A inhibitor with IC of 6.3 nM, which binds to the Ac-CoA site and demonstrates a 56% oral bioavailability in
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Acetylation of histones by lysine acetyltransferases (KATs) is essential for chromatin organization and function. Among the genes coding for the MYST family of KATs (KAT5-KAT8) are the oncogenes KAT6A (also known as MOZ) and KAT6B (also known as MORF and QKF). KAT6A has essential roles in normal haematopoietic stem cells and is the target of recurrent chromosomal translocations, causing acute myeloid leukaemia.

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The distance between nodes of Ranvier, referred to as internode length, positively correlates with axon diameter, and is optimized during development to ensure maximal neuronal conduction velocity. Following myelin loss, internode length is reestablished through remyelination. However, remyelination results in short internode lengths and reduced conduction rates.

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The human general transcription factor TFIID is composed of the TATA-binding protein (TBP) and 13 TBP-associated factors (TAFs). In eukaryotic cells, TFIID is thought to nucleate RNA polymerase II (Pol II) preinitiation complex formation on all protein coding gene promoters and thus, be crucial for Pol II transcription. In a child with intellectual disability, mild microcephaly, corpus callosum agenesis and poor growth, we identified a homozygous splice-site mutation in TAF8 (NM_138572.

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Hox genes underlie the specification of body segment identity in the anterior-posterior axis. They are activated during gastrulation and undergo a dynamic shift from a transcriptionally repressed to an active chromatin state in a sequence that reflects their chromosomal location. Nevertheless, the precise role of chromatin modifying complexes during the initial activation phase remains unclear.

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Over the past two decades, embryonic stem cells (ESCs) have been established as a valuable system to study the complex molecular events that underlie the collinear activation of Hox genes during development. When ESCs are induced to differentiate in response to retinoic acid (RA), Hox genes are transcriptionally activated in their chromosomal order, with the most 3' Hox genes activated first, sequentially followed by more 5' Hox genes. In contrast to the low levels of RA detected during gastrulation (∼33 nM), a time when Hox genes are induced during embryonic development, high levels of RA are used to study Hox gene activation in ESCs in vitro (1-10 µM).

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The neuropeptide relaxin-3 and its cognate G-protein-coupled receptor, RXFP3, have been implicated in the control of feeding behaviour in rats. For example, relaxin-3-positive projections and RXFP3 are present within hypothalamic feeding circuits, and icv injection of human relaxin-3 (-0.2 to 1.

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