The Octapeptidic End of the C-Terminal Tail of Histone H2A Is Cleaved Off in Cells Exposed to Carcinogenic Nickel(II) (original) (raw)

Involvement of histones in nickel carcinogenesis: a study of Ni(II) interactions with the 30-aa N-terminal tail of histone H4

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Alterations of histone modifications and transgene silencing by nickel chloride

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Interactions of Nickel(II) with Histones: Interactions of Nickel(II) with CH3CO-Thr-Glu-Ser-His-His-Lys-NH2, a Peptide Modeling the Potential Metal Binding Site in the “C-Tail” Region of Histone H2A

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Chemical Research in Toxicology, 1998

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Molecular Mechanisms in Nickel Carcinogenesis: Modeling Ni(II) Binding Site in Histone H4

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Coordination Chemistry Reviews, Volume 257, Issues 19–20, October 2013, Pages 2737-2751

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Molecular and Cellular Biology, 2006

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Molecular Mechanisms of Nickel Carcinogenesis

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Nickel compounds are novel inhibitors of histone H4 acetylation

Konstantin Salnikow

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Nickel Compounds Are Novel Inhibitors of Histone H4 Acetylation1

Max Costa

2000

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Nicotinamide N-Methyltransferase Suppression Participates in Nickel-Induced Histone H3 Lysine9 Dimethylation in BEAS-2B Cells

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Interactions of Nickel(II) with Histones. Stability and Solution Structure of Complexes with CH3CO-Cys-Ala-Ile-His-NH2, a Putative Metal Binding Sequence of Histone H3

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Chemical Research in Toxicology, 1995

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Exploring the molecular mechanisms of nickel-induced genotoxicity and carcinogenicity: a literature review

Paul Tchounwou

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Carcinogenic nickel silences gene expression by chromatin condensation and DNA methylation: a new model for epigenetic carcinogens

Konstantin Salnikow

Molecular and cellular biology, 1995

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Truncation of histone H2A's C-terminal tail, as is typical for Ni(II)-assisted specific peptide bond hydrolysis, has gene expression altering effects

James Hartley

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Epigenetic dysregulation by nickel through repressive chromatin domain disruption

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Nickel binding to histone H4

Enrico Monzani, Luigi Casella, Massimiliano Peana

2009

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Nickel Binding Sites in Histone Proteins: Spectroscopic and Structural Characterization- short paper

Guido Crisponi, Massimiliano Peana

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Perspectives on the mechanism of nickel carcinogenesis gained from models of in vitro carcinogenesis

Dan Heck

Environmental Health Perspectives, 1989

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Altered p53 gene structure and expression in human epithelial cells after exposure to nickel

Aage Haugen

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Effects of Nickel Treatment on H3K4 Trimethylation and Gene Expression

Stuart Brown

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Nickel compound-induced DNA single-strand breaks in chromosomal and nuclear chromatin in human blood lymphocytes in vitro: Role of oxidative stress and intracellular calcium

Nicole Lemieux

Mutation Research/Genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis, 2005

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Nickel ions inhibit histone demethylase JMJD1A and DNA repair enzyme ABH2 by replacing the ferrous iron in the catalytic centers

Michael Maroney

Journal of Biological …, 2010

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Nickel (II) enhances benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide-induced mutagenesis through inhibition of nucleotide excision repair in human cells: a possible mechanism for nickel (II)-induced carcinogenesis

Wenwei Hu

Carcinogenesis, 2003

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Hypoxia and nickel inhibit histone demethylase JMJD1A and repress Spry2 expression in human bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells

Thomas Kluz

Carcinogenesis, 2010

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Enhancement by L-histidine of nickel(II)-induced DNA-protein cross-linking and oxidative DNA base damage in the rat kidney

manoj K Misra

Chemical Research in Toxicology, 1993

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Oxidative DNA damage in cultured cells and rat lungs by carcinogenic nickel compounds

Shinya Toyokuni

Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2001

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Nickel(H)- and Cobalt(II)-dependent Damage by Hydrogen Peroxide to the DNA Bases in Isolated Human Chromatin1

Govind Rao

1991

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