Unfurling our heritage

by Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen

Our most precious things are kept where they meet the least damage. Out of reach on a shelf, in the depths of a drawer, deposited in a bank or perhaps parked in the garage. Frequently, too, a layer of protection is added by wrapping the valuable item in cloth or placing it in a padded box. Nature does exactly the same with one of its most treasured commodities: DNA. In eukaryotes, not only is our genetic heritage tucked away in the fortress-like nucleus of cells but it is also swathed in numerous molecules to form what is known as 'chromatin'. Protecting DNA is paramount, for obvious reasons. However, to survive, cells must have access to the genes their DNA carries in order to express them. This implies that cells need to dismantle the chromatin barrier, at different locations and at any given time. It's not so much dismantling chromatin, really, as remodelling it in such a way that genes are sporadically laid bare and thus open to transcription. One of the numerous proteins involved in chromatin remodelling is ATRX, so called because it is found on the X chromosome of mammals. An intriguing fact: in marsupials, ATRX is also found on their Y chromosome.

Protein Spotlight (ISSN 1424-4721) is a monthly review written by the Swiss-Prot team of the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics. Spotlight articles describe a specific protein or family of proteins on an informal tone. Follow us: Subscribe · Facebook · Linkedin

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LIFE, LOVE, DEATH & PROTEINS

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"La vie, l'amour, la mort & les protéines" (in French only) is a wonderful and unique collection of twenty comic strips created with cartoonist aloys lolo. Each comic describes one protein taken from the Protein Spotlight articles. The album was published in November 2023 by Antipodes, Switzerland. Order your copy online. English version online here.

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There is a famous sequence in Quai des Brumes – a very popular French film shot in the 1930s – in which Jean Gabin, subdued by the sky blue of his interlocutor’s gaze, leans over and breathes into Michèle Morgan’s ear, “T’as d’beaux yeux tu sais” – meaning literally: “You’ve got beautiful eyes you know” ... though it means far more. The blue of an eye is both fascinating and mysterious, and we are getting closer to an explanation for it. It is common knowledge that the colour of our eyes is due to the accumulation of a pigment in the iris – melanin – whose synthesis depends on the activity of a protein known as P protein. Despite years of research, scientists had not been able to pin down a modification in P protein, which could explain the azure of a look, until recently when the long sought after mutation was discovered – only not at all where they were expecting it!

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