TheScientist.com - Magazine of the Life Sciences, Every Day, Online
  Please Login or Register
  • Home
  • Community
  • Current Issue
  • Browse Archive
  • Careers
  • Video & Multimedia
  • Subscribe

Front Cover
Advertisement
NRW: North Rhine-Westphalia
Supplements
  • Life Sciences in
    Ireland
  • Life Sciences in
    the Greater
    Phila. Region
  • Schizophrenia
  • Autoimmunity


Survey Series
  • Best Places to Work
  • $alary $urvey
  • Lab Web Site and
    Video Awards

The Scientist Daily
  • Science headlines delivered daily.
    Register today.

Institutions
  • For Librarians
  • Recommend Us to Your Librarian

For Advertisers
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Ad Team
  • 2009 Media Kit



by Jonathan Weitzman

RESEARCH ROUND-UP

FLiP-ing insulators
An ingenious use of the FLP recombinase reveals distinct properties of genomic insulator elements in Drosophila.

Email: Jonathan Weitzman - jonathanweitzman@hotmail.com
News from The Scientist 2000, 1(1):20001123-01

Published 23 November 2000

Insulators define independent genomic regions that are protected from the influence of distant regulatory sequences. In the 1 November EMBO Journal, Parnell and Geyer describe a novel application of the FLP recombinase to investigate the properties of two Drosophila insulators, called gypsy and scs (EMBO J 2000, 19:5864-5874). Neither insulator affected FLP recombination and protein-protein interactions at adjacent recombination sites, suggesting that gypsy and scs do not act by general inhibition or chromatin structure rearrangement. The gypsy insulator could, however, block enhancer activity on extrachromosomal episomes created by FLP recombination, whereas the scs insulator acted as a gene silencer. So gypsy and scs appear to insulate genomic domains by two different enhancer-blocking mechanisms, which involve specific interference rather than global repression.


Not yet registered? Get free access
 

The article you are attempting to read is Premium content which is only available to our online subscribers.

 
 

Email

Password

> Forgot Password?
> FAQ
> Subscribe

 
Not yet registered? Get free access
 

Subscribing to The Scientist is easy and inexpensive.

 

And you can choose from many options. Try us out with an online day pass starting at only $4.95. Or, get it all with unlimited online access to The Scientist Archive and door-to-door delivery of our monthly print magazine.

 
  Not yet registered? Get free access  
 

The Scientist also offers site licenses to institutions and organizations. When your librarian adds The Scientist to the library's collection, you can get unlimited online access through your place of work or study.
Recommend The Scientist today

 





About TS | Contact | Advertise | Editorial Advisory Board | Privacy Policy
© 1986-2009 The Scientist