1st Edition

Microarrays and Transcription Networks

By M. Francis Shannon, Sudha Rao Copyright 2006
130 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

130 Pages
by CRC Press

While every cell of an organism has an identical genomic content, extremely complex networks exist to tailor the genomic output to the needs of that cell. This program of gene expression is different for every cell type and stage of development. In addition, the cell can respond to its environment by modulating its gene expression program in a fairly dramatic manner. For many decades gene... Read more
Preface 1. Microarrays and Gene Regulation Networks in Yeast 2. Transcription Regulatory Networks in Yeast Cell Cycle 3. Transcriptional Regulatory Networks from Yeasts to Humans 4. Identification of Mammalian E2F Regulatory Networks Using DNA Microarray Hybridization Analyses 5. The Nuclear Factor-KB Gene Regulatory Network 6. Transcriptional Networks in Mammalian Gene Regulation 7. Deciphering Regulatory Networks Controlled by the NF-kB Transcription Factor c-Rel in T Cells 8. Transcriptional Profiling of the Hepatic Growth Response 9. Transcriptional Responses to DNA Damage: Systems-Level Delineation by Functional Genomics 10. Elucidating Gene Regulatory Networks Underlying Complex Phenotypes: Genetical Genomics and Bayesian Network

Biography

M. FRANCES SHANNON is Professor and Head of the Division of Molecular Bioscience, John Curtin School of Medical Research at The Australian National University. Her main research interests include inducible gene transcription in the immune system, the interplay between chromatin and transcription and the role of the NF-?? transcription factors in immune gene regulation. She received her degrees in Ireland from University College Dublin and the National University of Ireland. SUDHA RAO is currently a research fellow in the Division of Immunology and Genetics at the JCSMR, ANU. After completing her Ph.D. at Kings College, London, she joined Prof. Shannons lab where she worked on NF-kB transcriptional networks and cytokine gene regulation. She has spent several years working as a senior scientist within the genomics department at Rhone Poulenc, U.K. to develop microarray technologies for drug development.