Fungi - Candida albicans - Research News, Data, Publications & Aproaches - ERG11 Mutations - Telomeres - Sub-Telomeric Structures - Chromatin Landscape - Nuclear Biology & Nuclear Chemistry Aproaches - Spatial and Chemical Determinants of ERG11 Regulation in Candida albicans - Non-Elaborate Posts - Post 1
The eukaryotic nucleus of Candida albicans is a landscape of intricate compartmentalization where architecture itself operates as a regulatory determinant. Rather than a random distribution of chromatin, the nucleus displays functional territories: transcriptionally active euchromatin occupies the interior, while repressed heterochromatin lines the periphery and nucleolar boundaries. Within this topological mosaic, essential genes are typically excluded from the heterochromatic rim. Yet ERG11 violates this architectural orthodoxy by residing in a subtelomeric region of chromosome 5R, perilously close to the repressive nuclear lamina. This positional paradox — vital enzymatic function embedded in a silencing-prone domain — underscores a fundamental rethinking of nuclear organization: that spatial adversity can confer regulatory versatility rather than constraint
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