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      Role of intranuclear lipids in health and disease

      Clinical Lipidology
      Future Medicine Ltd

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          Most cited references30

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          Phospholipid signaling.

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            The inner nuclear envelope as a transcription factor resting place.

            Just as people head to the beaches for a well-deserved rest, accumulating evidence suggests that transcription factors take similar 'vacations' at the nuclear envelope. Recent studies indicate that the periphery of the nucleus provides a platform for sequestering transcription factors away from chromatin. Several transcriptional regulators, operating in different signal-transduction pathways, have been found to interact physically with components of the inner nuclear membrane. In general, this association seems to restrict access to their target genes and limit their transactivation or transrepression abilities. The mechanisms of inner nuclear membrane association are diverse, and include regulated associations with the nuclear lamina and integral membrane proteins. Together, these findings indicate that the inside of the nuclear envelope functions as a resting place for transcription factors and suggest a more direct role for the nuclear envelope in gene regulation than previously anticipated.
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              Studies of inositol phospholipid-specific phospholipase C.

              Inositol phospholipid-specific phospholipase C is the enzyme that generates phosphoinositide-derived messenger molecules. Mammalian cells contain at least five immunologically distinct phospholipase C enzymes that appear to be separate gene products. Complete amino acid sequences of four of these isozymes have been established. The overall sequence similarity is surprisingly low for enzymes catalyzing the same chemical reaction: three of them show limited amino acid sequence similarity to each other in two narrow regions, and the fourth enzyme is completely different. The diversity in primary structure together with different regional and cellular expression of the isozymes suggests that each isozyme has a defined function in processing the physiological response of different cell types to a variety of external stimuli and that each is regulated differently.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clinical Lipidology
                Clinical Lipidology
                Future Medicine Ltd
                1758-4299
                February 2011
                February 2011
                : 6
                : 1
                : 59-69
                Article
                10.2217/clp.10.83
                dd5e4905-83f1-4484-8d10-4985d4ffdd0c
                © 2011
                History

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