Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2785537 Current Opinion in Genetics & Development 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Rett syndrome is a progressive neurological disorder caused by mutations in the methyl-DNA binding protein MeCP2. The longstanding model depicting MeCP2 as a transcriptional repressor predicts that the Rett syndrome phenotype probably results from misregulation of MeCP2 target genes. Somewhat unexpectedly, the identification of such targets has proven challenging. The recent identification of two MeCP2 targets, BDNF and DLX5, are suggestive of two very different roles for this protein — one as a classical repressor protein, and the other as a mediator of a complex, specialized chromatin structure.

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