Chemical biology of steroid and nuclear hormone receptors

The nuclear hormone receptors are ligand-gated transcription factors that modulate gene expression by directly acting upon genomic DNA, and have been of profound interest across all biological disciplines. Recent advancements in this area have included the expansion of transgene activation through l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in chemical biology 2007-02, Vol.11 (1), p.99-110
Hauptverfasser: Biggins, John B, Koh, John T
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Koh, John T
description The nuclear hormone receptors are ligand-gated transcription factors that modulate gene expression by directly acting upon genomic DNA, and have been of profound interest across all biological disciplines. Recent advancements in this area have included the expansion of transgene activation through ligand–receptor engineering, drug development from structural design and the exploitation of innate ligand-specific associations towards developing novel conditional protein-based recombinant and diagnostic tools. These advancements come on the heels of exciting new modes of hormone action that challenge and expand upon the classic paradigms of hormone receptor function.
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subjects Animals
DNA - genetics
DNA - metabolism
Drug Design
Gene Expression Regulation - genetics
Gene Expression Regulation - physiology
Humans
Ligands
Models, Biological
Models, Molecular
Receptors, Cell Surface - chemistry
Receptors, Cell Surface - metabolism
Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear - chemistry
Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear - metabolism
Recombinant Proteins
Steroids - chemistry
Steroids - metabolism
Transcription Factors - genetics
Transcription Factors - physiology
Transgenes - genetics
Transgenes - physiology
title Chemical biology of steroid and nuclear hormone receptors
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